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Dublin: 2 °C Saturday 25 May, 2013

UN envoy: Syria crisis is a threat to the world

The conflict’s death toll continues to rise with overnight air strikes killing 12 civilians and wounding 60 more.

Pro-Assad supporters chant slogans during a demonstration in Damascus on Friday.
Pro-Assad supporters chant slogans during a demonstration in Damascus on Friday.
Image: Muzaffar Salman/AP/Press Association Images

INTERNATIONAL PEACE ENVOY Lakhdar Brahimi warned after meeting President Bashar al-Assad on Saturday that the worsening conflict in Syria poses a threat to the region and the world at large.

“The crisis is dangerous and getting worse, and it is a threat to the Syrian people, the region and the world,” said the newly-appointed Brahimi, who took over as envoy earlier this month from former UN chief Kofi Annan.

Assad, quoted by state television, said that dialogue between Syrians held the key to a solution. The President also called for foreign countries to stop supplying arms to rebels.

“The real problem in Syria is that of combining politics with the work being done on the ground,” he said. “The political work continues, in particular by calling for dialogue between Syrians based on the aspirations of all Syrians.

The success of political action is dependent on putting pressure on the countries that finance and train the terrorists, and which bring weapons into Syria, until they stop doing so.

Eighteen months into Syria’s deadly conflict and without an end in sight, Assad said his government would “cooperate with all sincere efforts to solve the crisis, so long as the efforts are neutral and independent.”

Brahimi, a 78-year-old veteran Algerian troubleshooter, has also met with Foreign Minister Walid Muallem and members of the officially-tolerated opposition since he arrived in the Syrian capital on Thursday.

The envoy called for a united effort. “There is need for all parties to unite their efforts to find a solution for the crisis, given Syria’s strategic importance…and the crisis’s influence over the whole region,” he said.

“The solution can only come from the Syrian people,” stressed Brahimi, who is to hold talks later today with Arab ambassadors and a European Union delegation.

Brahimi already warned on arrival that the conflict is “getting worse,” as underlined by the daily bloodshed.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which gathers information from a network of activists on the ground, said 132 people were killed in violence on Friday, including 100 civilians, 18 of whom died in the capital.

Yesterday, Brahimi held talks with Syrian opposition figures who said he was bringing “new ideas” to the peace effort, as blasts rocked Damascus and regime air strikes targeted rebel areas in the northern city of Aleppo.

He met with opposition groups tolerated by Assad’s regime such as the National Coordination Committee for Democratic Change, which groups Arab nationalists, Kurds and socialists.

The group said it was sending a delegation on Saturday to China, a key Damascus ally, to urge Beijing to “put pressure on the regime to stop the violence, free detainees and allow peaceful protests.”

Brahimi is on his first Damascus visit since his appointment to replace Annan who quit the post after a hard-sought peace deal he brokered became a dead letter.

Back on the ground

Meanwhile, overnight air strikes killed at least 12 civilians and wounded around 60 in Al-Bab in northern Syria, doctors in the rebel-held town told AFP on Saturday.

Two fighter jets carried out a series of raids on the town between 4pm Friday and 4am Saturday, hitting homes and empty school buildings, a doctor at the town’s hospital said, asking not to be identified.

In one of the homes hit, four people lost their lives, three of them women, the father of one of those killed told AFP, while residents said there were no rebel fighters in any of the buildings hit.

Clashes on Saturday broke out in Syria’s main cities of Damascus and Aleppo.

In the northern city of Aleppo the army battled with rebels at the entrances to the rebel-held Bustan al-Basha district and helicopter gunships attacked the opposition bastions of Hanano and Sakhur, the Syrian Observatory said.

After a week of fighting over the central district of Midan, the army had taken most of the area and set up checkpoints for the first time, an AFP correspondent in the city said.

Regime forces also carried out air strikes against a rebel-held police post in Hanano for the second day in a row, after similar attacks on two police stations in Midan on Friday.

Near the capital, five rebels were killed by shelling and sniper fire in the southern suburb of Al-Hajar Al-Aswad where regime forces deployed in force, the Observatory said.

Clashes meanwhile broke out at the entrance of the Damascus suburb, the watchdog said, while a civilian was killed elsewhere in the province.

In the southern province of Daraa, fierce clashes broke out between rebel fighters and government troops as the army tried to retake the Lajat area — considered the most important rebel stronghold in the province.

The Observatory estimates that more than 27,000 people have been killed since the uprising against Assad’s rule erupted in March last year. The United Nations puts the toll at 20,000.

- © AFP, 2012

Related: Angelina Jolie calls for international help for Syrian refugees>

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Comments (16 Comments)

  • B Lowe 15/09/12 #

    This article is a terrible peace of journalism and heavily biased. The very fact that the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights is used as a basis for the article should have alarm bells ringing. This organisation is a one man operation from a flat in England who is heavily biased against the Syrian government. It should not have been used. Nothing in article about who is arming the so called rebels. The US/Saudi Arabia/Turkey/Oman/France/UK/NATO. These countries are arming the rebels, training them and financing them. This has been estaisged without doubt at this stage. This is a proxy war. These rebels are made up mainly of Islamic jihadists from all over(Chechnya, Egypt, Libya & other Islamic stares). All Qeada is also heavily present amongst the rebels. These so called rebels have committed terrible war crimes and the countries who are backing them should be held responsible. The Syrian government has every right to defend do itself against terrorist actions as indeed every soveirgn state does. I fervently hope these terrorists are defeated and then real dialogue and change can happen in Syria.

    Reply
  • David 15/09/12 #

    We’re probably overdue a world war as our planet is now seriously over populated.World leaders stand by as the cull begins in earnest in Syria.

    Reply
  • Just looking at sky news about protests in Australia I’d say the people arrested there are on there way back to were came from ,Why can’t other country’s be like

    Reply
    • The fact you watch sky news says it all…

      Reply
    • Sorry , gave u a red thumb my mistake. I totally agree with u, I have no problem with integration of cultures or nationalities but u must respect the law of the land u choose to live in. Most of these protestors would be shot in the countries they came from just for protesting in public, yet they claim refugee status when they arrive in western countries due to brutality at home, but first chance they get they try spread their way rather than integrate. Fair play to Australia for protecting their lifestyle. As a survivor of the Balli bombing, I have no time for Muslin extremists. They are savages and use any excuse to run riot. Bring on the the red thumbs but watch how the Muslim brotherhood party are making the most of the Arab revolution, spells serious trouble to me, yet NATO continue to arm rebels. Let them at it I say.

      Reply
  • David 15/09/12 #

    I’m glad someone is confident that the earth’s natural resources are nowhere near exhaustion.If we’re paying so much for them now, what will it be like with another couple of billion people draining them?

    Reply
    • B Lowe 15/09/12 #

      The planet of Earth natural resources are very far indeed from being exhausted. Vast land areas of Earth are untapped not to mention the mind boggling vastness of subterranean area. Indeed there is enough oil to last centuries even at current or future predicted growth rates. Don’t be fooled by mass media articles.

      Reply
    • B Lowe, don’t forget that “zero point energy” you mentioned before.

      Reply
    • B Lowe 15/09/12 #

      Well Declan, many believe zero point energy(as termed by Dr Richter back in the 50′s in Argentina) is a reality and has been invented. Many free energy systems have been invented but the one that is most easily researched is the magnetic one. It is the high price of oil and the massive amount of profit being made from it is the reason these systems have not come mainstream. Lots of these people who invent these systems end up dead.

      Reply
    • B Lowe,” people are murdered because they know of zero point energy”?
      Careful, they might come after you next. :)
      What other crack pot conspiracy theories can you tell me?

      Reply
    • B Lowe 15/09/12 #

      Good man Declan. Good to see you adhere to the notion that new scientific breakthroughs and discoveries are always immediately disclosed to the public and picked up by mainstream media. Mainstream media is obviously where you are informed from. Of course, there is no possibility that mainstream media is it owned by a couple of business/families and they would not have any agenda. Back to sleep. It’s part your bedtime.

      Reply

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