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Syria's Assad names new prime minister
(AP)
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has appointed agriculture minister Riad Hijab as the strife-torn country's new prime minister
RELATED
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has named former agriculture minister Riad Hijab as prime minister to form a new government after last month's parliamentary election, state television reported.
"President Assad issued a decree asking Riad Hijab to form a new government," the television said on Wednesday.
The appointment comes after a new parliament was voted in on May 7 in elections boycotted by opposition groups.
Syrian foreign ministry spokesman Jihad Makdissi confirmed the report on Twitter, saying: "Dr Riad Hijab is the new prime minister of Syria and will form the new government."
Hijab, 46, replaces former premier Adel Safar, who had formed his government in April 2011, one month after an Arab Spring-inspired uprising erupted across Syria, shaking the regime which responded with force.
According to figures of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, more than 13,500 people, mostly civilians, have been killed in the uprising.
Hijab was born in Syria's eastern Deir Ezzor province and holds a PhD in engineering. He was appointed minister of agriculture in April 2011.
Prior to that, from 2004 to 2008, he served as head of the Baath Party in Deir Ezzor. He later became the governor of Quneitra province, near the border with Israel, and subsequently the governor of Latakia.
He is married with four children.
Hijab's appointment comes days after a defiant Assad dismissed allegations that his government had a hand in last month's Houla massacre and accused foreign-backed forces of plotting to destroy Syria.
"What happened in Houla and elsewhere are brutal massacres which even monsters would not have carried out," Assad told the parliament on Sunday of the May 25 killing of 108 people, including 49 children, near the central town of Houla.
"The masks have fallen and the international role in the Syrian events is now obvious," he said in his first address to the assembly since the parliamentary election.
The polls were the perfect response "to the criminal killers and those who finance them," Assad said, stressing that his regime was determined to push through reforms but not at the expense of security.
Bloodshed has persisted in Syria despite a UN-backed peace plan brokered by international peace envoy Kofi Annan that put almost 300 observers on the ground.
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