Representatives
from more than 60
Western
and Arab countries are meeting in Tunis, Tunisia today to call for
the
Syrian government to implement an immediate ceasefire and to allow
humanitarian assistance
for civilians and people wounded in violence. The group is not expected
to
discuss military
options but will threaten increased sanctions if the Syrian regime
doesn't
comply within days. Former U.N. Secretary General Kofi
Annan was appointed as a special envoy by the United Nations and the
Arab
League to represent the organizations in efforts at ending "violence and
human
rights violations, and promoting a peaceful solution to the Syrian
crisis." Syrian state
TV
referred to the conference as a meeting of "symbols of colonialism" and
said
the countries attending were "historic enemies of the Arabs." Neither
Russia
nor China, who vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution based on an
Arab
League plan aimed to end the Syrian violence, attended the conference.
The
"Friends of Syria" seem to be favoring the opposition Syrian
National
Council, but are not giving the group exclusive recognition.
The other main opposition group, the National Coordination Committee, is
boycotting the conference. Activists have reported that over 7,000
people have
been killed since the beginning of the 11-month uprising. The
International Red
Cross appealed to the Syrian government for a ceasefire so that aid
could be
brought in and wounded people could be evacuated, but they have received
no
response. Concern is growing particularly for the city of Homs where the
bombardment continues unabated and injured
journalists have released videos appealing
for
assistance.
Friday, February 24, 2012
“Friends of Syria” meet in Tunis to call for ceasefire
Thursday, February 23, 2012
Journalists Marie Colvin, Remi Ochlik killed in Syria
Two award-winning journalists — prominent American war
correspondent Marie Colvin and French photojournalist Remi Ochlik — were
killed Wednesday by Syrian shelling of the opposition stronghold Homs
The attack, which killed a total of at least 13 people, came as
President Bashar Assad's regime escalated its attacks on rebel bases by
using helicopter gunships, activists said. Weeks of withering barrages on the central city of Homs have failed to drive out opposition factions that include rebel soldiers who fled Assad's forces.
Hundreds have died in the siege and the latest deaths further galvanized international pressure on Assad, who appears intent on widening his military crackdowns despite the risk of pushing Syria toward full-scale civil war.
A witness contacted by Reuters from Amman said shells hit a house in the Baba Amr district of Homs in which Colvin, who worked for the U.K.'s Sunday Times newspaper, Ochlik and other journalists were staying and a rocket hit them when they tried to escape.
Syrian activists said French reporter Edith Bouvier of Le Figaro and British photographer Paul Conroy, also of The Sunday Times, were wounded in Wednesday's shelling. Bouvier was said to be in serious condition.
Friday, February 3, 2012
clashes in cairo between the police and protesters.
Civilian and military police used batons to disperse protesters
in front of Egypt's parliament building Saturday as the death toll from
rioting that began a day earlier rose to at least nine people,
demonstrating that smoothly run elections haven't absorbed all public
anger against continued military rule.
Videos circulated on social-media networks
appeared to show riot-gear clad police officers dragging protesters
along the asphalt, stripping female demonstrators of their clothes,
beating activists with truncheons and brandishing handguns to threaten
stone-throwing activists.
In a statement Saturday, the military leadership said the dispersal of protesters in Tahrir Square had been peaceful and that the armed forces would "never target revolutionaries." Embattled interim Prime Minister Kamal al Ganzouri blamed the violence on "foreign hands," an echo of the blame-casting that has defined official responses to uprisings across the Arab world.
More than 300 people have been injured in the two days of violence.
Among the dead was Sheikh Emad Effat, a prominent, elderly cleric from Cairo's historic Al Azhar University who has sided with protesters against the military. Thousands attended his funeral march Saturday in downtown Cairo.
Saturday also saw the military leadership and its appointed interim government make halting attempts at damage control in the face of increasingly embarassing fallout from the violence.
Protesters clash with police in downtown
Cairo as violence continues days after the start of Egypt's first free
elections in six decades. Video courtesy of Reuters.
In a statement Saturday, the military leadership said the dispersal of protesters in Tahrir Square had been peaceful and that the armed forces would "never target revolutionaries." Embattled interim Prime Minister Kamal al Ganzouri blamed the violence on "foreign hands," an echo of the blame-casting that has defined official responses to uprisings across the Arab world.
More than 300 people have been injured in the two days of violence.
Among the dead was Sheikh Emad Effat, a prominent, elderly cleric from Cairo's historic Al Azhar University who has sided with protesters against the military. Thousands attended his funeral march Saturday in downtown Cairo.
Saturday also saw the military leadership and its appointed interim government make halting attempts at damage control in the face of increasingly embarassing fallout from the violence.
Wednesday, February 1, 2012
un .security council meets
“I certainly think the discussion at the Security Council illustrated the strength of the arguments for the Arab League plan and also illustrated that there were not many arguments against it. Some of the nations that have had misgivings about passing such a resolution did not state very powerful arguments against it. So I think the benefit of the argument went very clearly to those of us advocating the support for this resolution. Of course, we will hold discussions with Russia and other nations over the next 24 hours to see if we can make progress on this resolution”.
Responding to Russian concerns that the resolution might lead to a civil war or foreign intervention the Foreign Secretary said:
“We have people dying every day. We have between 30 and a 100 people being killed violently, every day. We have the torture and abuse of huge numbers of people, including children. What the Arab League are putting forward is a plan for a peaceful resolution of this situation. So that is the answer to those who think it could make the situation worse. This is a plan by the countries in the region for addressing this problem peacefully in a Syrian led political process... This is not about foreign intervention in Syria. This is about the United Nations Security Council supporting a Syrian-led political process instigated by the countries of that region”
He also rejected criticism that the resolution amounted to regime change:
“It’s been our view for a long time that President Assad should go and has lost all credibility, not only internationally, but with so many of his own people as well. But that is not what it says in this resolution which supports the Arab League plan and calls on him to give the power to his deputy to conduct negotiations and discussions with all parties in Syria. I think it was very clear in what the Prime Minister of Qatar said in presenting the position of the Arab League and what the Secretary-General of the Arab League said. They were very clear that that is what they are proposing and that is not regime change from the UN Security Council”.
Earlier the Foreign Secretary had rejected the arguments of the Syrian Ambassador to the UN:
“The Representative of the Syrian Arab Republic spoke about the idealism of children in his country in the 1950s and 1960s without noting the irony that the descendants of those children, the children of 2012, are now being tortured and murdered in the name of their own government and it is not acceptable to try to blame the situation in Syria on everyone else, from outside intervention, to the Gulf States, to French diplomats, to Lawrence of Arabia This does not excuse such repression, violence, which is a shame on any nation”.
UN Ambassadors will meet again this afternoon in New York to discuss the draft resolution further. The UK hopes that yesterday’s debate will help bring agreement so that the Council can move swiftly to a vote. As the Foreign Secretary said:
“To fail to do so would be to undermine the credibility of this institution, betray the Syrian people, snub the Arab League and fail in this Council’s responsibilities...The leaders of the Arab world putting forward a plan by which the Syrian people can decide on their own future. And that is surely something that all Members of the United Nations should be able to support”
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)