LONDON: The Syrian Arab Republic has removed the travel bans of nearly 5 million people imposed during the authoritarian rule of the Bashar Assad regime.
Nour Al-Din Al-Baba, the Interior Ministry’s spokesperson, announced on Thursday that the ministry had processed about 8.3 million travel ban cases and had completed the removal of 5 million of them, which had restricted Syrians’ fundamental right to free movement.
He added that the former regime used the travel ban as a punishment alongside suppression, killings, detention, and displacement.
The Assad regime restricted individuals’ ability to travel abroad by preventing them from obtaining passports, residency permits, and other essential documents for civil and financial matters, Al-Baba explained.
Some individuals had been arbitrarily added to the list. Al-Baba noted that 50,000 names on the list were labeled with “unknown” nationality.
The ministry is working to address the issue of individuals deemed “wanted” during the former regime, as well as to improve the passport issuance process for citizens, the Syrian Arab News Agency reported.
Al-Baba said that there were 1.15 million government employees still on the travel ban list. The ministry was reviewing each case to ensure that individuals removed from the list were not implicated in crimes against Syrians, or financial crimes. He gave assurances that the issue would be resolved in a few months, securing the rights of citizens.











