Pakistan hails Syria’s first post-Assad elections, criticizes Israeli presence in the country

An election poster of Henry Hamra, a Syrian-American parliamentary candidate who is the son of the country's last rabbi and who if elected will be the first Jewish representative in the Syrian parliament since the late 1940s, is displayed on the entrance of the closed Jewish Maimonides School of Damascus, in the Jewish quarter of the old city of Damascus on October 3, 2025, ahead of the upcoming vote on October 5. (AFP/File)
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  • Syria held indirect elections on 140 seats of the People’s Assembly on earlier this month
  • Pakistan says Israeli violations of the 1974 Disengagement Agreement threaten stability

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan on Wednesday praised Syria for holding its first parliamentary elections since the end of Bashar Assad’s rule in December, calling it a “significant step” in the political transition while condemning Israel’s continued military presence in the war-torn Middle Eastern country.

Syria held indirect voting on 140 parliamentary seats earlier this month. The elections, taking place under transitional governance, was viewed as vital to the political reconfiguration of the country, though voting in Kurdish-controlled and restive regions such as Suwayda faced delays and logistical challenges.

“We welcome the holding of parliamentary elections for the People’s Assembly of Syria on 5 October 2025 to elect 140 members, marking a significant step in the country’s political transition,” Pakistan’s Acting Permanent Representative to the United Nations, Ambassador Usman Jadoon, said during a UN Security Council briefing on the humanitarian and political situation in Syria.

“This reflects a move toward greater political engagement and the rebuilding of state institutions,” he added. “We also hope that regions which experienced delays due to security concerns will soon be able to hold elections, ensuring inclusive participation across the country.”

Jadoon also highlighted a recent agreement between the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and the central government to integrate SDF units into Syria’s national army, describing it as a “positive and necessary contribution” to national cohesion and the restoration of unified state institutions.

The SDF, a Kurdish-led alliance, had maintained an uneasy truce with Damascus during the war, administering autonomous areas in the country’s northeast.

He urged the international community to ease sanctions on Syria to enable economic recovery, reconstruction, and reintegration, welcoming the United States and European Union’s decisions to lift multiple restrictive measures, as well as reconstruction efforts by Türkiye, Qatar and Ƶ.

Condemning Israel’s “repeated and egregious” violations of the 1974 Disengagement Agreement, Jadoon said Israeli forces were maintaining positions on the Syrian side of the ceasefire line.

The accord, brokered after the 1973 Arab-Israeli war, established a UN-monitored buffer zone between Israeli and Syrian forces in the Golan Heights.

“Such actions are seriously undermining ongoing efforts to preserve Syria’s unity and stability,” Jadoon said, adding that any new security arrangements must have the consent of the concerned parties.