Syria has extended the Arab League monitors' mission for a month, Foreign Ministry spokesman Jihad Makdessi told CNN Tuesday.
This comes after the league voted Sunday to extend the mission.
Syrian media quoted the Foreign Ministry as saying the mission will last
until February 22. Foreign Minister Walid Moallem sent a letter to Arab
League Secretary-General Nabil el-Araby notifying him of Syria's
agreement to the extension.
But the mission took a hit when it lost more than a third of its manpower Tuesday.
The six nations from the Gulf Cooperation Council withdrew their
observers because of continuing bloodshed in Syria and the government's
"lack of commitment" to adhere fully to the plan it agreed to with the
Arab League.
The bloc includes Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates,
Qatar, Bahrain and Oman. Saudi Arabia decided to pull out its monitors
Sunday and the other countries followed Tuesday.
Ahmed Marai, an Arab League official in Cairo, told CNN that 55
monitors from Gulf Cooperation Council countries have been withdrawn
from the mission. The council called on other Arab countries to pressure
Syria to implement Arab League decisions.
Syria's FM speaks out on the Arab League
Syria rejects power transfer plan
Sound of gunfire is 'new normal' in Homs
It is also calling for the five permanent members of the U.N.
Security Council -- the United States, France, Britain, Russia and China
-- and other council members to ratchet up pressure on the regime. It
wants the Security Council to support the Arab League's Syrian
initiative by passing a resolution.
The Gulf Cooperation Council has a lot of pull in the region. It
brokered a presidential transition plan in Yemen and sent troops to
Bahrain during the unrest there.
A draft U.N. resolution on Syria obtained Tuesday by CNN calls on
"all states" to take steps similar to those taken by the Arab League
last November, when it imposed sanctions on Syrian authorities.
The Security Council "condemns the continued widespread and gross
violations of human rights and fundamental freedoms by the Syrian
authorities such as the use of force against civilians, arbitrary
executions, killing and persecution of protesters and members of the
media, arbitrary detention, enforced disappearances, and interference
with access to medical treatment, torture, sexual violence, and ill
treatment, including against children," says the draft, which was
written by the French and is one of several in circulation.
The council demands that the Syrian government "immediately put an
end to all human rights violations and attacks," the draft says.
In Washington, State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said the
departure of the observers will leave "a big, big hole in this operation
now, and it's the direct result of the Assad regime's rejection of the
larger proposal for a national dialogue."
The 22-member Arab League has called on Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad's regime to stop violence against civilians, to free political
detainees, to remove tanks and weapons from cities, and to allow
outsiders -- including the international news media -- to travel freely
in Syria.
There are close to 100 monitors at present. Anwar Malek, a former
Arab League monitor from Algeria who has criticized the mission, said he
expected more monitors to withdraw after he slammed the effort earlier
this month. He said snipers targeted his car after he spoke out.
"Not a single monitor I met was happy or felt safe on the ground," Malek said.
The league is working on a proposal for al-Assad to transfer power to
his vice president following the formation of a national unity
government.
The group's plan calls for the government to start talks with the
opposition within two weeks and for the formation of a new government
within two months. A new constitutional council would follow, as would a
plan for parliamentary and presidential elections.
The proposal is the clearest indication to date from the Arab League
on what its member states would like to see happen in Syria. The league
plans to take the idea to the United Nations in a bid to build
international support.
El-Araby and Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Jasem Al Hamad sent a
letter to the United Nations Tuesday requesting a meeting with
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon on the league's proposed national unity
government for Syria, according to an Arab League official. The official
asked not to be named because he is not authorized to speak with the
media.
The league does not want military intervention but is requesting the
support of the U.N. Security Council for its initiative, the official
said.
Ban and el-Araby spoke by phone Monday and Ban "reiterated the
readiness of the United Nations to provide technical support in the form
of training for observers," said U.N. spokesman Martin Nesirky.
El-Araby has offered Egyptian reform leader Mohamed ElBaradei a role
as a special political envoy to Syria, ElBaradei's media officer said.
ElBaradei, a Nobel laureate and former head of the International Atomic
Energy Agency, has neither accepted nor refused.
Susan Rice, the U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, said the
situation in Syria "continues to deteriorate dramatically" and the
Security Council "should fully support the Arab League's efforts to
broker an end to the bloodshed and a peaceful transition to democracy in
Syria."
"Despite the presence of Arab League monitors, the regime is ignoring
its commitments to the Arab League plan, including by failing to end
all acts of violence and to protect Syrian civilians," she said. "Scores
of civilians are killed every day. Thousands of political detainees
remain incarcerated across the country, many at serious risk of torture.
As a result of the regime's failure to fulfill the requirements of the
Arab League plan, there are more and more calls from the region for
Security Council involvement."
The uprising against the regime and the resulting government
crackdown have engulfed the country for more than 10 months. The United
Nations last month estimated that more than 5,000 people have died since
March. Opposition groups are estimating a higher death toll. The Local
Coordination Committees of Syria, an opposition group that organizes and
documents anti-government demonstrations, said Tuesday more than 6,600
deaths have been documented since the unrest began. Avaaz, a political
activist group, says the death toll has exceeded 7,000.
At least 68 people were killed Tuesday in Syria, the LCC said. The
dead included five defected recruits and 47 people in Homs -- 18 of them
when two buildings were shelled in the city's Bab Tadmur neighborhood
and 12 in shelling at the Karm Al-Zayton neighborhood, it said. The
other deaths occurred in Hama, Idlib, Raqqa, Daraa, Douma and Damascus,
the group said.
The scene in Hama was particularly grim, said Samer Al Husain, the
nom de guerre of an activist in the Revolutionary Council of Hama who
asked that his real name not be used.
"I have a relative who saw missiles coming into the city early
morning yesterday, three tanks and one armor were seen near Bab Al Qibly
neighborhood, which is still surrounded with army forces until now,
bombing is heard continuously since the morning, this neighborhood is
being attacked since then because mass demonstrations were held the
under the protection of Free Syrian Army."
Speaking from Damascus, he said a 6-year-old boy had been shot in the head.
"We thought he died, but he was alive, but we couldn't say that he's
still alive because we thought the regime security forces would come and
force his family to say that terrorists did that to him," he said.
The state-run Syrian Arab News Agency reported that 16 people, including civilians and security forces, were buried Tuesday.
The Syrian government has rejected the Arab League plan for the transfer of power.
Moallem, the foreign minister, said the league report "violates the
sovereignty of Syria." He said the observer mission report showed that
Syria had fulfilled the mission's protocol, but that it was replaced
with a "political report."
Speaking to reporters in Damascus, Moallem said his country needed "a
Syrian solution driven by Syrian interests," which would be based on
implementing out al-Assad's reform plan.
Moallem repeated his government's contention that the uprising is
driven by a "conspiracy." He said some Arab entities are "implanting the
stages of the plot against Syria, which they agreed upon abroad."
"We are perfectly aware of the dimension of the conspiracy and we
will deal with it firmly," the foreign minister said, adding that "it is
the duty of the Syrian government to deal seriously and firmly with
armed elements."
Syria blames the bloodshed on armed terrorists, and Moallem said the
number of armed groups has sharply increased since the mission's arrival
December 26.
Moallem noted that Iran has been a solid ally and that sanctions imposed on Syria have exacerbated the economic crisis.
Russia will "not agree on the foreign interference in Syria's
internal affairs and this is a red line," Moallem said about the key
member of the U.N. Security Council, which has sold arms to Syria.
"During talks with Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Michael Bugdanov, I
sensed that the Russian stance is solid and no one can question the
Russian-Syrian relations, as they are deep-rooted."
U.S. Assistant Secretary of State Jeffrey Feltman had "very
constructive talks" Tuesday in Moscow with his Russian counterpart,
State Department spokeswoman Nuland told reporters in Washington. "He
also, of course, raised our concerns about Russian arms sales to Syria,
arms trans-shipments, made clear how dangerous we consider this to be,"
she said.
me:
it should put in question the mission and because they extended
No comments:
Post a Comment