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Ghazi Kan'an -
Second High Ranking Syrian Official to Commit Suicide in Bashar
Al-Assad's Presidency
Syria's minister of interior and "strongman" in Lebanon for more than
a decade Ghazi Kan'an is the second high-ranking Syrian official
reported to have committed suicide since Bashar Al-Assad became
president of Syria. The first was prime minister Mahmoud Al-Zu'bi, in
June 2000. Following the death of Al-Zu'bi in 2000, Al-Ahram Al-Arabi
published an article by its editor Dr. Abd Al-Mun'im Al-Sa'id that
hinted at an indirect connection between the Syrian government and Al-Zu'bi's
death. The following are excerpts from Dr. Sa'id's article:(1) "I do
not know what went through the Prime Minister's mind, in those
dramatic and daunting moments before he put his pistol in his mouth
and fired the bullet that brought his life to an end. Definitely, it
was a special moment in the life of this man, as he felt the chill of
the metal on his lips - or its warmth, depending on the room
temperature - as he let his fingers slide to the trigger, and squeezed
it. Before a man severs his ties with the world of the living to enter
the other world from which no one has returned. they say his entire
life flashes before his eyes like a movie. In this film, there was a
story of a great ascent. It is not easy, generally speaking, to rise
to the status of a Prime Minister. In the third world, the ascent is
even tougher. In countries that are governed by a single strong party
with an 'eternal message,' like the Ba'ath party, the difficulties are
almost insurmountable...
"However, Mr. - or rather, Comrade - Mahmoud Al-Zu'bi made it to the
top; although the top position of a Prime Minister in our
countries is usually a bit insubstantial, since the President holds
the real power. However, the president's preoccupation with important
issues of the homeland and sometimes the world grants the head of the
executive branch a great kingdom in which he can operate. His
influence and the respect he is granted grow with the trust he enjoys
from the top of the pyramid. Since he manages the daily affairs and
controls the public funds, the power in his hands is not small. There
is no doubt that Comrade [Al-Zu'bi] invested great effort in reaching
the high post. He had to compete with people whose power and influence
matched his own. Although the difficulties encountered on his way up
were many, the struggle to remain at the top for thirteen consecutive
years was even greater. Not only did he have to compete with many
ambitious people, but he also had to buy many loyalties and sponsors
so as to remain the chosen man for the job, and in order to continue
to keep his grip on the government, and the resources within his
reach. The moment our man reached the top may also have been the
moment in which his fall to the abyss began. Beneath the narrow peak
lies a broad plain inhabited by the jealous and ambitious, those
hungry for power and fortune. All of them tried to grab Comrade Al-Zu'bi
by the throat and drag him down to the bottom. It took them thirteen
years to succeed. When the moment [finally] came, his star faded. His
comrades discovered, or maybe decided to reveal what they had known
for a long time, that this high official was corrupt. The faces of his
[comrades] passed one by one before [the Prime Minister's] eyes when
the security agents came to escort him to the interrogation. It was a
tough moment, no doubt. Comrade [Al-Zu'bi] knew what dark fate awaited
him. [Feeling] his chest squeezed, he saw in his mind's eye a vision
of his wife, Nawal Al-Darubi, and his children, Muflih and Hamam, who
he made sure would be as happy as sons of a Prime Minister should be.
Such children are often gifted only when their father is in
government. An American story I read a long time ago said that when a
man gets close to his final moments, he undergoes four stages:
resistance, anger, bargaining, and acceptance. In resisting his
expected fate he questions the legitimacy of those who are about to
bring his life to an end. Comrade Al-Zu'bi probably relived his long
life in the [national] struggle, his services to the state, the nights
without sleep for the sake of the higher - and lower - interests of
his nation. No doubt he asked himself if all this does not atone for
his mistakes - which he can explain, with documents. However these
thoughts were killed by the presence of the security agents on the
ground floor of his house, as well as his knowledge that the media had
already convicted him before the trial and that the entire state is on
the threshold of a new era. As is customary in our countries, [he knew
that] new eras require the elimination of the old ones, including the
events and people that created them. This led [Comrade Al-Zu'bi to]
anger. Why was he, of all of Allah's creatures, chosen to symbolize
the end of an era and the beginning of a new one? Why aren't his
partners in both work and corruption, those who took with him and
split the gifts sharing his fate? Deep inside Comrade Al-Zu'bi may
have been innocent. In this moment of anger he imagined himself to be
the victim of a conspiracy that targeted his honor, his past, and his
family. The guilty ones are those who ask for his neck. [But] the
severing of this neck [he decided] will not easy; it will require long
trials during which [he recalled], he would be moved between many
prisons that are not necessarily convenient, as he knew well...After
some time, [Comrade Al-Zu'bi] regained his poise and entered the third
stage of the process, the stage of bargaining: the story is not over
yet, he thought. He could go to the higher leadership and remind them
of their common past in the struggle, but this will probably be in
vain. The leadership probably knows better than he does. Maybe he can
threaten them because he knows many things. He has read many files. At
this moment it became clear to [Comrade Al-Zu'bi] that bargaining
involves the threat of fighting back. He shot twice in the air... The
sound of the shooting [he hoped] would draw a crowd. But the crowd did
not come, and the bargaining failed. By shooting in the air [Al Zu'bi]
passed the point of no return and reached the stage of accepting his
fate. He put the barrel of the pistol in his mouth and felt its
chill-or warmth, depending on the temperature of the room-he set his
finger on the trigger, the bullet was fired, and his soul returned to
its creator. This is the story of the suicide of the Syrian Prime
Minister, Mahmoud Al-Zu'bi. This version rebuts claims and rumors that
he did not commit suicide [but rather, was murdered]. It reminds us of
the story of General 'Amer [Egyptian Chief of Staff who committed
suicide after the 1967 defeat]. There too, questions arose about
whether he committed suicide or was murdered. [But] the story of the
suicide is completely logical and it expresses the drama of the
regimes in our countries, the arduous ascent, the painful fall, the
tragedy and comedy [at the same time], and the process of moving from
one era to another. Each era has its figures and only Allah knows the
reasons for His actions." Source: Memri.
Endnotes:
(1) See MEMRI Special Dispatch No. 101, "Suicide of a Prime Minister:
An Egyptian Intellectual Criticizes Arab regimes," .

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