Editorial Note: The
following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may
also include corrections of Arabic names and political terminology.
Comments are in parentheses.
54 Syrian Protesters
Killed by Army Fire, Lavrov in Cairo, Annan in Damascus
Latest news reports
showed an agreement between Russia and the Arab League on a five-point
initiative to cease-fire in Syria. The Russian FM, Lavrov, agreed to not
use the Russian veto in the UNSC in a new resolution based on the
initiative, which also allows for humanitarian assistance and
negotiations.
Arab League and Russia
rule out intervention in Syria
Russian and Arab League
ministers agreed on Saturday there should be no foreign
intervention in Syria. After the meeting in Cairo, Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (pictured) said delegates wanted
an "end to the violence whatever its source".
AFP - Arab and Russian foreign ministers
meeting in Cairo on Saturday called for an end to the violence
in Syria "whatever its source", as they try to reach common
ground on ways to resolve the deadly conflict.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told reporters after a
meeting at the Arab League headquarters on Syria that he and his
Arab counterparts want "an end to the violence whatever its
source."
Reading out a joint statement, Lavrov and Qatari Foreign
Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim Al-Thani said they also agreed
on setting up a mechanism for "objective monitoring" in the
conflict-stricken country, and had agreed on no foreign
intervention there.
They also called for "unhindered humanitarian access" in
Syria and support for the mission of UN-Arab League envoy Kofi
Annan to Damascus.
They said the five-point statement was based on the General
Assembly resolution passed on February 16 and on previous Arab
resolutions.
'Terrorists' are preventing peace,
Assad tells Annan
Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad warned the UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan on Saturday
that peace efforts would end in failure as long as “terrorist
groups” remain active in the country. Assad did promise to back
any “honest” bid to end the crisis.
REUTERS - President Bashar al-Assad told
U.N./Arab League envoy Kofi Annan on Saturday that no political
solution was possible in Syria while “terrorist” groups were
destabilising the country.
“Syria is ready to make a success of any honest effort to
find a solution for the events it is witnessing,” state news
agency SANA quoted Assad as telling his guest.
“No political dialogue or political activity can succeed
while there are armed terrorist groups operating and spreading
chaos and instability,” the Syrian leader said after about two
hours of talks with the former U.N. secretary-general.
While they discussed Annan’s peace mission, Syrian troops
were assaulting the northwestern city of Idlib, a rebel bastion.
“Regime forces have just stormed into Idlib with tanks and
heavy shelling is now taking place,” said an activist contacted
by telephone, the sound of explosions punctuating the call.
There was no immediate comment from Annan after his meeting
with Assad, aimed at halting bloodshed that has cost thousands
of lives since a popular uprising erupted a year ago.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who met Annan in
Cairo earlier in the day, told the Arab League his country was
“not protecting any regime”, but did not believe the Syrian
crisis could be blamed on one side alone.
He called for a ceasefire and humanitarian aid access, but
Qatar and Saudi Arabia sharply criticised Moscow’s stance.
“Truce not enough”
Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani, whose
country has led calls for Assad to be isolated and for Syrian
rebels to be armed, said a ceasefire was not enough. Syrian
leaders must be held to account and political prisoners freed,
he declared.
Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal said shortcomings in
the U.N. Security Council, where Russia and China have twice
vetoed resolutions on Syria, had allowed the killing to go on.
International rifts have paralysed action on Syria, with
Russia and China opposing Western and Arab calls for Assad, who
inherited power from his father nearly 12 years ago, to quit.
Annan also planned to meet Syrian dissidents before leaving
Damascus on Sunday. He has called for a political solution, but
the opposition says the time for dialogue is long gone.
“We support any initiative that aims to stop the killings,
but we reject it if it is going to give Bashar more time to
break the revolution and keep him in power,” Melham al-Droubi, a
Saudi-based member of the Muslim Brotherhood and of the exiled
Syrian National Council, told Reuters by telephone.
“We hope that Annan convinces Bashar to stop the killings,
step down and call for a parliamentary election,” he said,
expressing scepticism that Assad would respond positively.
Annan’s trip to Damascus followed a violent day in which
activists said Assad’s forces killed at least 72 people as they
bombarded parts of the rebellious city of Homs and sought to
deter demonstrators and crush insurgents elsewhere.
Decisive victory has eluded both sides in an increasingly
deadly struggle that began as a mainly peaceful protest movement
a year ago and now appears to be sliding into civil war.
Russia pivotal
The United Nations estimates that Syrian security forces have
killed well over 7,500 people. Syria said in December that
"terrorists" had killed more than 2,000 soldiers and police.
Russia, one of Syria’s few foreign friends and its main arms
supplier, could play a pivotal role in any negotiated solution.
“If (Annan) can persuade Russia to back a transitional plan,
the regime would be confronted with the choice of either
agreeing to negotiate in good faith or facing near-total
isolation through loss of a key ally,” the Brussels-based
International Crisis Group said in a paper this week.
Chinese and Russian reluctance to approve any U.N. resolution
on Syria stems partly from their fear that it could be used to
justify a Libya-style military intervention, although Western
powers deny any intention to go to war again in Syria.
A Russian diplomat said this week Assad was battling al
Qaeda-backed militants, including 15,000 foreign fighters who
would seize cities if Syrian troops withdrew.
The Syrian opposition denies any al Qaeda role in the
uprising, but Islamists are among rebels who have taken up arms
against Assad under the banner of the Free Syrian Army.
Qatar’s Sheikh Hamad chided Russia for accepting the Syrian
government’s portrayal of insurgents as armed gangs.
“There are no armed gangs, the systematic killing came from
the Syrian government side for many months. After that the
people were forced to defend themselves so the regime labelled
them armed gangs,” he told the Arab League meeting.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will meet Lavrov in
New York on Monday on the sidelines of a special U.N. Security
Council ministerial meeting on Arab revolts, with Syria likely
to be a central topic.
Syrian forces killed at least 54 people on Friday as they sought to
quell demonstrations against President Bashar Assad before a peace
mission by UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan, opposition activists said.
Tank rounds and mortar bombs crashed into opposition districts in
the rebellious central city of Homs, killing 17 people, activists said,
while 24 were killed in the northern province of Idlib and more deaths
were reported elsewhere.
"Thirty tanks entered my neighborhood at
seven this morning and they are using their cannons to fire on houses,"
said Karam Abu Rabea, a resident in Homs's Karm al-Zeitoun neighborhood.
One focus of demonstrations was the anniversary of Kurdish unrest in
Syria in 2004 when about 30 people were killed.
Many thousands of
Kurds demonstrated in northeastern cities, YouTube footage showed, some
carrying banners that read "Save the Syrian people". Other clips showed
hundreds of protesters in the Assali district of Damascus, burning
posters of Assad's father Hafez al-Assad and chanting "God damn your
soul, Hafez".
Syria's state news agency SANA reported big
pro-Assad demonstrations in Damascus and Hassaka in the northeast.
Tight media restrictions imposed by authorities make it hard to
assess conflicting accounts of events on the ground.
Street
protests have swelled every Friday after Muslim prayers since the
anti-Assad revolt erupted a year ago, despite violent repression by the
military and loyalist militias.
Decisive victory has eluded both
sides in an increasingly bloody struggle that appears to be sliding into
civil war.
Aid access
UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos,
who visited Homs this week, said Assad's government had agreed to join
UN agencies in a "limited assessment" of civilian needs in Syria, but
had not met her request for unhindered access for aid groups.
Syrian officials had asked for more time, she told a news conference in
Ankara after visiting Syrian refugees arriving in growing numbers in
border camps in Turkey.
Amos said she was "devastated" at the
scenes of destruction she saw in Homs and that she wanted to know the
fate of civilians who had lived in the city's Baba Amr district, which
rebel fighters left on March 1 after a 26-day siege.
Activists in
the city said Amos's visit had changed nothing. "We want to stop the
killing and to eat," said Waleed Fares, speaking from Khalidiya district
in Homs.
The United Nations estimates at least 25,000 refugees
have fled Syria in the past year, said Adrian Edwards, a spokesman for
the UN refugee agency.
The UN figures were based mainly on
refugees who have registered with the UNHCR. Many others have fled to
neighboring countries without registering. Edwards said significant
numbers of Syrians are also thought to be displaced within the country.
Annan, who begins his peace mission in Damascus on Saturday, has
called for a negotiated political solution, but dissidents say there is
no room for dialogue amid Assad's crackdown.
Rifts among big
powers have blocked any UN action to resolve the crisis, with China and
Russia firmly opposing any measure that might lead to Libya-style
military intervention.
China, which dispatched an envoy to Syria
this week, said on Friday it would send an assistant foreign minister to
the Middle East and to France to discuss a way forward.
Beijing
urged Annan to "push for all sides in Syria to end their violence and
start the process of peace talks".
Russia, an old ally of
Damascus and its main arms supplier, has defended Assad against his
Western and Arab critics, twice joining China in vetoing UN resolutions
on Syria.
"We shall not support any resolution that gives any
basis for the use of force against Syria," Russian Deputy Foreign
Minister Gennady Gatilov tweeted late on Thursday.
Western powers
have shied away from any such action. "The option of any military
intervention is not on the table," French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe
said in Morocco on Friday.
France's Foreign Ministry also said
Paris would not accept any UN Security Council resolution which would
assign responsibility for the violence in Syria equally between the
Syrian government and the opposition.
"There is no equivalence
between the savage repression that Bashar Assad's clan has perpetuated
for months and the legitimate desire of the Syrian people for the
respect of their rights," said ministry spokesman Bernard Valero.
A Russian diplomat said Assad was battling al Qaeda-backed
"terrorists" including at least 15,000 foreign fighters who would seize
cities if government troops withdrew.
The Syrian opposition
denies any al Qaeda role in a popular uprising against nearly five
decades of Baathist rule.
Moscow could play a vital role in any
diplomatic effort to ease Assad from power and spare Syria further
bloodletting.
"If (Annan) can persuade Russia to back a
transitional plan, the regime would be confronted with the choice of
either agreeing to negotiate in good faith or facing near-total
isolation through loss of a key ally," the Brussels-based International
Crisis Group said in a paper this week.
Syrian security forces
have killed well over 7,500 people since the anti-Assad uprising began a
year ago, according to a UN estimate. The government said in December
that "armed terrorists" had killed more than 2,000 soldiers and police.
Syrian Deputy Oil Minister Abdo Hussameldin has announced his
defection on YouTube, becoming the first high-ranking civilian official
to abandon President Bashar Assad since the uprising against his rule
erupted a year ago.
"I Abdo Hussameldin, deputy oil and mineral
wealth minister in Syria, announce my defection from the regime,
resignation from my position and withdrawal from the Baath Party,"
Hussameldin said in the video, the authenticity of which could not be
immediately confirmed.
"I join the revolution of this dignified
people," he said in the video uploaded on Wednesday and seen early on
Thursday.
He said he had been in government for 33 years but did
not want to end his career "serving the crimes of this regime", adding:
"I have preferred to do what is right although I know that this regime
will burn my house and persecute my family."
Syrian security
forces have killed more than 7,500 civilians during the crackdown on
pro-democracy protests, according to the United Nations, and the outside
world has proved powerless to halt the killing.
While saying very
preliminary military planning was under way, US Defense Secretary Leon
Panetta on Wednesday defended US caution in trying to end the violence,
despite criticism from legislators who questioned how many people would
have to die before the Obama administration used force.
UN
humanitarian chief Valerie Amos saw a scene of devastation and near
desertion on Wednesday when she visited the Baba Amr district of the
city of Homs that was shelled by the military for nearly a month after
becoming a rebel holdout.
Hussameldin said: "I say to this
regime: you have inflicted on those who you claim are your people a
whole year of sorrow and sadness, denying them basic life and humanity
and driving Syria to the edge of the abyss."
Assad appointed
Hussameldin, 58, to his current position through a presidential decree
in 2009. He said the country's economy was "near collapse". There was no
mention of the defection on Syrian state media.
Wearing a suit
and tie, Hussameldin looked relaxed as he looked directly into the
camera in a tight head and shoulders shot, appearing to read from a
prepared statement on his lap as he sat on a dark gray chair against a
yellow background.
Opposition sources say the government,
controlled by Assad's minority Alawite sect that has dominated power in
Syria for the past five decades, has effectively stopped functioning in
provinces that have been at the forefront of the uprising, such as Homs
and the northwest province of Idlib.
But public defections have
remained rare among the civilian branches of the state, despite
thousands of the mostly Sunni soldiers and conscripts who make the bulk
of the army deserting since the uprising broke out last March.
Devastation
Amos is hoping to secure access for humanitarian
organizations, which have been barred from the zones of heaviest
conflict.
Syria had initially failed to grant Amos access to the
country but relented after Damascus's allies Russia and China joined the
rest of the UN Security Council in a rare rebuke of Syria for not
allowing her in.
"It was like a closed-down city and there were
very few people around," Amanda Pitt, a spokeswoman for the UN Office
for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said of Amos's visit to
Baba Amr on Wednesday, adding it "looked like it was devastated from the
fighting and shelling".
Amos went in with a team of Syrian Arab
Red Crescent aid workers, who entered Baba Amr for the first time in 10
days, before heading back to Damascus where she held talks with Syrian
Foreign Minister Walid al-Moualem earlier in the day.
He told her
Syria was trying to meet the needs of all citizens despite the burdens
imposed by "unfair" Western and Arab sanctions, the state news agency
SANA said.
A convoy from the International Committee of the Red
Cross has been unable to enter Baba Amr since arriving in Homs on
Friday, a day after the district fell to the Syrian military.
US
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said delays in aid were unacceptable
and called on Syria to respect a pledge last November to withdraw its
forces, release political prisoners and allow peaceful protests.
"The regime's refusal to allow humanitarian workers to help feed the
hungry, tend to the injured, bury the dead, marks a new low," Clinton
said after meeting Poland's visiting foreign minister.
Clinton
said she planned to meet Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov on
Monday during a special UN meeting on the Arab Spring revolts which
swept the Middle East last year and toppled four veteran leaders,
including Libya's Muammar Gaddafi.
Russia, one of Assad's few
remaining allies, has, with China, blocked UN Security Council
resolutions calling for him to step aside. Its UN envoy on Wednesday
accused Libya's new rulers of running a training center for Syrian
rebels and arming the fighters in their battle to overthrow Assad.
"This is completely unacceptable ... This activity is undermining
stability in the Middle East," said Vitaly Churkin, who also questioned
whether "the export of revolution" was "turning into the export of
terrorism".
Assad's government says the uprising is a campaign by
foreign-backed Islamist insurgents that has killed 2,000 police and
soldiers since the protests erupted.
Military options
US
President Barack Obama said on Tuesday it was only a matter of time
before Assad left office, but has shown no enthusiasm for US
participation in an election-year military mission to force him out.
He said on Tuesday it was a mistake to think there was a simple
solution to the year long crackdown on the Syrian opposition or that the
United States could act unilaterally.
Panetta told the Senate
Armed Services Committee the administration was still trying to forge a
consensus on addressing the violence. "That makes the most sense. What
doesn't make sense is to take unilateral action at this point."
He and General Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff,
told the panel that, at Obama's request, the Pentagon had studied US
military options in Syria, assessing issues such as potential missions
and Syria's troop line-up.
Dempsey underscored the very basic
nature of the planning.
"The commander's estimate process really
looks at ... what are the potential missions, what is the enemy order of
battle, what are the enemy's capabilities ... what are the troops
available and how much time. So mission, enemy, terrain, troops and
time. That's a commander's estimate," he said.
The world has
found no way to halt a year of bloodshed since many Syrians rose against
Assad in what has proved one of the longest and bloodiest Arab revolts
against entrenched rulers.
At the United Nations, the five
permanent Security Council members and Morocco met on Tuesday to discuss
a US-drafted resolution urging an end to the Syrian crackdown and
unhindered humanitarian access.
In another effort to stop the
violence, former UN chief Kofi Annan plans his first visit to Damascus
as joint envoy of the United Nations and the Arab League on Saturday.
Nonetheless, the violence has continued. Syrian activist groups said
the army, after its onslaught on Homs, has begun to mass forces around
rebel bastions in Idlib province, which borders Turkey.
The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the army had started to
concentrate outside the towns of Saraqeb and Jabal al-Zawiya as well as
Idlib city. Jabal al-Zawiya has been mostly in rebel hands in past
months and would be difficult for the army to clear because of rugged
mountainous terrain.
The Observatory said there were heavy
clashes around Saraqeb on Wednesday night. Lebanese officials close to
the Syrian government previously had told Reuters that Assad's aim was
to crush the rebels in Homs and move on to Idlib.
Syrian media
curbs make it hard to verify such reports.
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