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Friday, June 01, 2007

Featured on syriacomment.com

The popular site syriacomment.com posted a review of syriapol:

About a year ago, the polling site Syriapol was launched, created by George Ajjan, a Syrian-American Republican activist who has commented frequently on US-Syria relations here and elsewhere. Below is a press release that includes a summary of the first phase of the project, in which most of the 350 poll takers were expat Syrians. George hopes to get more participation from inside Syria in the second phase.

Although online polls are usually not as reliable as properly designed polls which try to ensure that their samples are representative of the broader population, George managed to to get closer to the ideal case by targeting Syrians who held various political views by listing a link to syriapol on most of the popular Syrian blogs and sites. This ensured that the sample of participants was not drawn exclusively from Syrians with any specific political camp.

It also included a press release. Here are some excerpts:

The survey's creator, Syrian-American political activist George Ajjan, anticipates the second, more substantial phase of the project, which would entail greater participation from within Syria, thus far limited due to compliance with US sanctions against Syria. Ajjan, whose family emigrated to the US from the city of Aleppo in the early 20th century, says he created the project to offer more reliable information about Syrian public opinion to decision makers and activists across the globe than the biased propaganda spouted by political operatives, both pro-regime and pro-opposition.

syriapol, by contrast, uses a market research technique called conjoint analysis to extract the respondents' preferences on a series of attributes related to regime change, form of government, economic reforms, democratic elections, as well as the Peace Process, and then immediately provides the results confidentially in a graphical format to the individual participant. According to Ajjan, the survey's format, in which a participant evaluates a series of 16 hypothetical scenarios, encourages a more honest assessment because it does not ask direct yes/no questions that almost always lead to jaded responses from participants fearful of government spying.

As for the results, Ajjan says that the initial indications are interesting, but far from conclusive because about 75% of the approximately 350 respondents thus far do not live inside Syria. He further stipulates that online surveys could never provide a truly accurate picture of Syrian society on the whole, given the low rate of Internet penetration, with the caveat that the syriapol project at least provides some quantitative data to balance a political atmosphere currently filled with little more than spin.

Saturday, May 12, 2007

More press on syriapol and the sanctions

Reason, one of the foremost libertarian journals in the United States, has published a letter to the editor concerning syriapol in its May issue:

After the Damascus SpringMay issue of Reason magazine

Guy Taylor did a great job writing about Syrian bloggers and Internet freedom in "After the Damascus Spring" (February). If you're looking for a delicious irony, consider my story: I created a political website for Syrians inside Syria. It was blocked and nobody in the country could view it.

Why? Not because of Assad or some other Syrian control freak—because of godaddy.com, from which I bought the domain name. Because of U.S. sanctions, no one inside Syria (or any other sanctioned nation) is able to view any site that GoDaddy registers or hosts. Is that insane or what?

George Ajjan - Clifton, NJ

This was also alluded to in an article on antiwar.com, discussing Liz Cheney's impact on American policy toward Syria.

Saturday, January 27, 2007

syriapol mentioned in new Syrian magazine

"FW:", a new english language Syrian magazine, has mentioned syriapol in its inaugural issue, in an article discussing US sanctions against Syria.

...the US also needs to reevaluate the tactical elements of the existing sanctions in place, and the guidelines given to companies who make decisions regarding transactions with sanctioned nations like Syria. In some cases, the policies are downright reckless, especially concerning virtual business conducted over the Internet.

For example, the website called "Syriapol – A Syrian Democracy Project", a public opinion portal designed to measure Syrian political attitudes toward governance, economic progress, democratic reforms, and the peace process, was blocked from view in Syria. Contrary to intuition, though, it was not the Syrian government that had censored the site, but rather the American company, a very popular webhosting service called GoDaddy.com, from whom the domain name had been purchased, which blocks anyone inside Syria from accessing any website that they register. The company explained, "The United States Government asks that we do not conduct business with [Syria]…if a person resides in [Syria], they will not be able to complete a purchase from our website or access our network…this means that people in [Syria] will not be able to access our services."

The irony of this position is beyond ridiculous. A website branded as "A Syrian Democracy Project", devoted to promoting democratic concepts to the Syrian people in line with the Bush Administration’s objectives, cannot be accessed because of American sanctions designed to punish the Syrian government for not being democratic enough.

This flawed tactical policy espoused by the Bush Administration blatantly spites the President's stated goal of spreading freedom. It also contradicts the strategic advice of the congressional panelists, several of whom pointed out the importance of preserving people-to-people exchange between conflicting nations. America cannot
expect to see positive change and a strengthening of a reform agenda in countries like Syria if it supports attempts to block Syrian citizens from even viewing the Internet.
The article is not yet online, but scans can be found here: page 1 and page 2.

Tuesday, June 13, 2006

Feedback from syriapol users

Feedback from syriapol users so far has been outstanding. It is indeed exciting to see Syrians taking this poll and expressing their political points of view with passion, as diverse as they are (both pro-regime and pro-opposition).

I also thank everyone for their compliments and constructive criticisms. I would estimate that 90% of the feedback has been positive. Here are some examples.

"Congratulations on the seeming success of your endeavour. You have to be commended for executing a project of this type."
"Thank you for taking on this important initiative."
"I'm happy that your direct attention to all comments is gaining trust in your survey."
"Thanks, and as to what you are doing the famous saying applies: To light a candle is thousand times better than cursing the darkness."
"The idea is really great. This is the first effort of the kind that I am aware of."
"The results turned out to be pretty consistent with my general views. This is a testament to how good the survey has been constructed. I would like to congratulate Mr. Ajjan and encourage others to participate."
"Very well designed survey. I think George really took his time in designing and fine-tuning it."
"Great Job really. The choices are put forward in a very smart way to discern the important facts."
There were only 2 or 3 nasty replies to the poll. Here is how one person filled out the questions on the survey. I leave you to judge, bearing in mind that my surname is مو عجاج : عجان

birth = بلدي الذي أنت تكرهه
residence = أرضي التي تريد أغتصابها
citizenship = أنا عربي و أفتخر لعروبتي و لا أريد لمتأمرك مثلك أن يعلمني الوطنية
news = بالطبع ليس من طريقكم يا أيها الخونة
party = حزب المحبة للوطن يا بائع الوطن يا عجاج الكلب
ethnicity = أنت بلا أصل و العيب ليس عليك بل على أهلك الذين لم يربوك جيداً
religion = طبعاً لن أكون متصهين مثلك و عميل
email = La3nat_almsaih@3lik.com

----------

birth = حوش عرب كله جرب
residence = بيت الجيران لأنو عنا فيران
citizenship = جنسية أبوكم يا ولادين الدب
news = يا ولادين الكلب متلكم بيجبوا الفتنة
party = جزب كل مين أيدو ألو شو دخلكم فينا
ethnicity = نحنا كلنا مالنا أصل هلق بدكن تساوا فتنة
religion = مسلم ارذثوكس أو شيعي كاثوليك أو ما دخلكم
email = Tfou_Alikom_Mni@Ikhoanmslmin.org

Sunday, February 19, 2006

Welcome to the syriapol blog - أهلاً و سهلاً في مدونة

Thank you for taking the survey. Please leave your feedback here - it is important for Syrians of ALL viewpoints to exchange their views on the future of Syria in a neutral forum.

I especially encourage arabic speakers to contribute their feedback in Arabic to the comments section. I would like this site to be as bi-lingual as possible.

شكراً للمشاركة! هل ترغب من فضلك بتسجيل إنطباعك؟ إنه من الهام لجميع السوريين، من كل الاتجاهات، أن يتبادلوا الآراء حول مستقبل سوريا في موقع محايد

أتمنى بشكل خاص من الناطقين باللغة العربية أن يرسلوا إنطباعاتهم باللغة العربية. إذ أنني أسعى لكي يصبح هذا الموقع ثنائي اللغة ما أمكن إلى ذلك سبيلاً! شكراً

Sunday, February 05, 2006

Arabic translation complete - القراءة باللغة العربية

At long last, the Arabic translation of syriapol has been completed and the site is nearly ready for official launch. I would like to thank TB, SA, JK, MA, SE, HM, JL, GJ, ZA, KO, GA, RI and others for contributing to the translation and proofreading.

شكراً لـ ط ب، س ع، ج ك، م ع، ش ع، ه م، ج ل، ج ج، ز ق، غ ع، ك ع، ر ا

للمساعدة على القراءة باللغة العربية

The english site can be viewed at http://www.syriapol.com, or باللغة العربية