It is good to see Russia, Lavrov particularly, finally has had the
courage to stand against foreign powers meddling in Syrian affairs.
After all, those doing the uprising against Assad are all western
educated and connected.
Russia accuses West of inciting Syrian rebels
UN postpones vote on a Western-backed resolution that threatens Syrian
authorities with sanctions after suicide bombing.
Last Modified: 18 Jul 2012 18:15
Lavrov says Western powers are unwilling to compromise on a solution to
the Syrian conflict [EPA]
The United Nations Security Council has postponed until Thursday a vote
on a Western-backed resolution that threatens Syrian authorities with
sanctions in a bid to end the 16-month conflict, Russia's UN envoy said.
"A possible vote has been postponed until tomorrow morning," Vitaly
Churkin, the Russian ambassador, told reporters after a meeting of the
envoys of the council's five permanent members, adding that further
talks on the measure would be held on Wednesday.
International envoy Kofi Annan had requested the delay amid differences
between Moscow and the resolutions's Western sponsors over whether
Damascus should be threatened with sanctions.
Russia has vowed to veto the resolution drawn up by Britain, with the
backing of France, United States, Germany and Portugal. The resolution
proposes non-military sanctions under Chapter VII of the UN Charter if
President Bashar al-Assad does not halt the use of heavy weapons within
10 days of a resolution being passed.
Russia accused the West of inciting the Syrian opposition after the
defence minister and Assad's brother-in-law were killed in a bomb
attack, arguing that a proposed UN resolution amounted to support for
the rebels and would lead to more bloodshed.
In-depth coverage of escalating violence across Syria
"Instead of calming the opposition down, some of our partners are
inciting it to go on," Sergey Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, was
quoted as saying by the RIA Novosti news agency on Wednesday.
Supporting the Syrian opposition "is a dead-end policy, because Assad is
not leaving voluntarily," he said.
Despite the probable delay in the vote there was no sign that Russia has
withdrawn its veto threat. "We cannot accept Chapter VII and the section
about sanctions," Sergei Lavrov, the Russian foreign minister, said in
Moscow on Wednesday.
'Need to act'
Foreign ministers from the five permanent Security Council members -
Russia, United States, France, Britain and China - were negotiating the
future of the resolution, diplomats said.
UN ambassadors from the five countries held talks at the Council on when
the vote would go ahead.
The mandate of the UN Supervision Mission in Syria (UNSMIS) ends on
Friday and without a resolution the UN may have to hurriedly withdraw
the nearly 300 unarmed observers now in Damascus.
The Western countries will "seriously consider" Annan's request, said
Peter Wittig, UN envoy for Germany which is currently a non-permanent
member of the council.
"We want to give diplomacy a chance but there has to be meaningful
engagement on the side of Russia and China with our resolution," Wittig
told reporters.
Russia, Assad's main ally, and China have vetoed two council resolutions
which just hinted at sanctions.
"We just don't want business as usual. We want a strong signal with that
resolution and the events in Damascus today of course dramatically
highlight the need for the council to act at long last," Wittig added.
Rare insights into life in Homs under daily shelling
"We have a responsibility. Syria is sliding into chaos," the Germany
envoy said.
More than 17,000 people have been killed since a popular uprising
against Assad began 16 months ago, activists say.
"Decisions should be taken by people in Syria, the Syrian people,"
Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said during the press
conference in Moscow with Russia's President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday
afternoon.
"This process being prolonged is resulting in more and more massacres
being committed by Assad, just like his father."
Following the Russia-Turkey press conference, Al Jazeera's Jennifer
Glasse noted that both Russia and Turkey had said that they were backing
the option preferred by the Syrian people.
"Russia believes what the people want is no intervention," she said,
while Turkey says the majority of the Syrian people are calling for
international intervention.
"Russia is very clear that it wants its resolution passed, and that it
will not back any resolution that will impose sanctions."
'Terrorist action'
Ali Akbar Salehi, the Iranian foreign minister, condemned a suicide
bombing which killed three Syrian security chiefs on Wednesday, in a
telephone call with his counterpart in Damascus.
"Salehi condemned the terrorist action committed today in Damascus
during a telephone conversation with Walid Muallem," the official IRNA
news agency reported.
Tehran is the main regional ally of Assad's regime, advocating dialogue
between the government and opposition.
According to IRNA, Salehi called for "an immediate end ... to foreign
interference and arms shipments ... to Syria and the support of some
regional and international parties for terrorist action".
"The Islamic Republic of Iran condemns all violence and destructive
action and believes that dialogue is the only solution to end the Syrian
crisis," the minister said.
Meanwhile, the White House said Wednesday that President Bashar al-Assad
was losing control of Syria, after a deadly attack on his inner circle,
and that the United States was working urgently with international
partners to push for a political transition there.
"There is real momentum against Assad, with increasing defections, and a
strengthened and more united opposition that is operating across the
country," Tommy Vietor, the spokesperson for the White House, said after
Wednesday's suicide bombing in Damascus.
"With the Assad regime losing control, it's time for the Syrian people
and the international community to focus on what comes next," he said.
"We are working urgently with our international partners to push for a
political transition in Syria. The international community, including
the opposition, has met several times to begin this process and it must
continue."
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