The wife of acclaimed Syrian
artist Youssef Abdelke, whose works are displayed in museums around the world,
appealed for his release on Saturday, after his arrest by regime security
forces.
He had been arrested at a security
checkpoint in the western port city of Tartus two days previously, along with
two fellow members of the Communist Labour Party.
Abdelke, born in 1951, is also
a member of the internal opposition National Coordination Body for Democratic
Change (NCB).
He has been jailed in the past
by the Syrian authorities.
Abdelke's friends and family
have rallied around his wife Hala Alabdalla, a prominent film-maker, and
launched a campaign on Facebook calling for his release from jail.
"His detention may be a small thing when compared to the
bloody violence and destruction (gripping Syria) but it's still
unacceptable," Alabdalla said in a telephone interview.
Hours before his detention,
Abdelke signed a petition written by artists expressing their commitment to
"the principles of the popular revolution launched in March 2011... aimed
at establishing a democratic, pluralist political system" in Syria.
Novelists, poets and musicians
also signed the petition which, she said, demands the ouster of President Bashar
al-Assad and the transfer of power to an interim government, under UN
supervision.
"Anyone who works peacefully and from inside Syria for the
revolution (against Assad) to succeed... is sacred and shouldn't be
touched," Alabdalla said.
In a message posted on the
Facebook page calling for his release, she wrote: "Freedom for Youssef
Abdelke, freedom for all Syria."
Alabdalla said she lost touch
with her husband, a Christian, late on Thursday as he arrived at a security
checkpoint on the outskirts of Tartus.
With him were Tawfiq Omran and
Adnan al-Dibs, both members of the communist party and the NCB, said the
opposition group which supports the uprising but rejects foreign intervention
in the conflict now in its third year.
Abdelke has spent "half
his life in regime's jails and in forced exile", said a statement on the
Facebook page set up to demand his release.
He was jailed in the past over
his membership of the communist party and in 1981 moved to Paris -- where he
had studied fine arts -- until his return to Syria 25 years later.
One of Syria's best known
artists, Abdelke has had his paintings on display at the British Museum, in the
Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris and in other galleries around the world.
Alabdalla says that her
husband, who was born in the northeastern city of Qamishli, has been banned
from travelling since the uprising began.
Rights
groups say tens of thousands of people are being held in the Syrian regime's
jails.
Zaman Alwasl - Agencies
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