eu to add asma alassad to sanctions list
Last Updated : GMT 06:49:16
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Last Updated : GMT 06:49:16
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EU to add Asma al-Assad to sanctions list

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Arab Today, arab today EU to add Asma al-Assad to sanctions list

Brussels - Agencies

Asma al-Assad, the British-born wife of the Syrian president is to be added to a European Union sanctions blacklist later this week after details of her online shopping sprees were revealed by leaked emails. The 36-year-old former investment banker and other relatives of regime members will join 114 Syrians – topped by her husband Bashar – and 38 organisations subject to freezes on their assets and bank accounts in EU member states. European diplomats said the decision to add Mrs Assad to the list would be taken on Friday at a meeting of EU foreign ministers in Brussels. "A number of family members will be added to the list," said a diplomatic source. EU and British officials have faith that the move will add to the "stranglehold" on the regime, though it has survived 11 previous rounds of sanctions. Like others already listed, Mrs Assad is likely to be subject to an EU travel ban, though this would not prevent her travelling to Britain, if she has retained her British citizenship. Born and raised in Acton, west London, she married Mr Assad in late 2000, the year he was installed as president following the death of his father, Hafez. Her role in the president's inner circle has come under increased scrutiny after emails written by Syria's first couple were leaked by opposition activists. They showed that as the government offensive that has claimed an estimated 8,000 lives intensified, she shopped online in London and Paris, spending tens of thousands of pounds on jewels, furniture and a Venetian glass vase from Harrods. She used an alias to make purchases from Europe and asked a friend to acquire a copy of Harry Potter and the Deathly Hallows Part II for her two older children. In drawing up previous sanctions, the EU froze "all funds and economic resources" belonging to "persons responsible for the violent repression against the civilian population" or "persons and entities associated with them". Mrs Assad may already have violated sanctions with her online shopping spree that could expose her to prosecution. The regulations prohibit EU citizens from making "funds or economic resources" available to anyone named on the list. Before the protests against her husband's rule began a year ago, she cultivated the image of a glamorous yet serious-minded woman with strong Western-inspired values who would liberalise the ruling family and the country. A glowing article in Vogue magazine described her as "a rose in the desert" and her household as "wildly democratic". That image crumbled when her husband responded to the anti-government rebellion with extreme violence. She has shown no sign of the inner torment that some who met her beforehand assumed she was going through. Her messages to her husband and her friends are utterly supportive of him and at times display a resolve to see the crisis out. "If we are strong together, we will overcome this together...I love you," she wrote to her husband on December 28. In her only statement since the crisis broke out, she said: "The president is the president of Syria, not a faction of Syrians, and the first lady supports him in that role." The emails also show that her father, Fawaz Akhras, a cardiologist at London's Cromwell hospital who has a private practice on Harley Street, regularly provided advice to Mr Assad on media and public relations policy. "She and her father are accomplices to this crime. They learned nothing from the democracy here in the UK," said an opponent of the regime in London who asked to be named as Fawaz. He claimed that Mrs Assad had become a hate figure for many in the expatriate community of which she was once a part.  "They have stolen Syrian money. She is squandering it here in London," he said.  

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