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International talks seek Syria consensus
by Staff Writers
Tunis, Tunisia (UPI) Feb 24, 2012

Russian, Chinese attitudes on Syria must be changed: Clinton
Tunis (AFP) Feb 24, 2012 - US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said Friday that the international community must work to change Russia and China's positions against measures to stop the Syrian regime's crackdown.

"We need to change the attitude of the Russians and Chinese," Clinton told journalists after a meeting of Arab and Western foreign ministers on Syria in Tunisia.

"They must understand they are setting themselves against the aspirations not only of the Syrian people but of the entire Arab Spring."

Clinton said the Russians and Chinese "are basically saying to Tunisians, to Libyans, to others throughout the region: 'Well we don't agree that you have a right to have elections to choose your leaders.' I think that is absolutely contrary to history and it is not a position that is sustainable."

Clinton said the sooner the two countries move "toward supporting action in the Security Council, the sooner we can get a resolution that would permit us to take the kind of steps that we all know need to be taken."

"It is quite distressing to see two permanent members of the Security Council using their veto when people are being murdered, women, children, brave young men... It is despicable and I ask whose side are they on? They are clearly not on the side of the Syrian people."


International talks aiming to end bloodshed in Syria sought consensus on measures that could circumvent the problem of having to work without China and Russia, the two powers that continue to support Syrian President Bashar Assad.

The so-called Friends of Syria coalition of EU, U.S. and Arab League diplomats and ministers worked Friday through drafts that could become the basis for a plan of action.

U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said the talks would focus on easing the humanitarian crisis, increasing pressure on the Assad regime to ease its military assault on civilian protesters and opposition groups and preparing ground for a post-Assad Syria.

"We look forward to concrete progress on three fronts -- providing humanitarian relief, increasing pressure on the regime and preparing for a democratic transition," Clinton told reporters in London before flying to Tunis.

As she announced $10 million of U.S. humanitarian aid, Clinton said the meeting should serve as a warning to Assad that "you will pay a heavy cost for ignoring the will of the international community and violating the human rights of your people."

Assad has dismissed the talks as a gathering of Syria's enemies. The absence of China and Russia from the meeting opened the possibility that the talks would prompt a quest for a framework that could get around the problem of facing another veto from the two permanent U.N. Security Council members.

Support is growing within EU governments for going beyond introducing tougher sanctions. Syrian opposition delegates attending the talks articulated this change and called for open military aid, an option so far ruled out by EU, U.S. and other Arab participants.

Arab League diplomats say that, short of a military showdown, Assad could be persuaded to hand over power if promised safe exit to a friendly place of refuge, such as Russia.

Tunisian President Moncef Marzouki echoed Arab League's preference of keeping the initiative in Arab hands and not encourage a repeat of the NATO-led military intervention that toppled Moammar Gaddafi in Libya.

A NATO-led military operation in Syria is least likely option but there is a groundswell of support for some sort of military intervention fronted by the pro-West opposition, analysts said. The Syrian rebels are receiving military support from undisclosed sources, thought to be Qatar.

More than 6,000 people have been killed in the country since the uprising began, including scores reported dead in a siege on Homs.

A U.N. panel, in a 72-page report, said there was evidence that officials at the "highest level of government" were behind the 11-month assault on anti-regime groups in the country. Damascus says it is facing armed rebels funded by its foreign enemies.

Most Arab-led diplomatic efforts support a settlement with the Assad regime that will either grant Assad more time and maintain control or facilitate his safe exit without a dismantling of the state. A referendum for a draft constitution, planned for the weekend in Syria, aims to maintain links between the current ruling elite and any future government.

More than 70 nations and organizations represented in the Friends of Syria group include Turkey and France, two countries that took part in the Libya operation in different capacities. Britain and France led the NATO military assault on Libya while Turkey largely played a humanitarian role.

This time, however, there is lukewarm support for direct European involvement in any military campaign but increasing sympathy for arming the rebels.

British Foreign Secretary William Hague said the British government would recognize the opposition Syrian National Council as the "legitimate representative of the Syrian people." SNC has appealed for arms shipments from Friends of Syria coalition members if Assad fails to accept an Arab League-led package for peace.

Former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan announced he accepted a request from the United Nations and Arab League to serve as a joint special envoy on the Syrian crisis.

"I look forward to having the full cooperation of all relevant parties and stakeholders in support of this united and determined effort by the United Nations and the Arab League to help bring an end to the violence and human rights abuses, and promote a peaceful solution to the Syrian crisis," he said in a statement.

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Iraq will not invite Syria to Arab summit: FM
Baghdad (AFP) Feb 24, 2012 - Iraq will not invite the Syrian government or opposition to an Arab summit to be held in Baghdad in late March, Iraq's foreign minister said in an interview broadcast on Friday.

"Syria is not invited and we will not send an invitation to it" to attend the summit, Hoshyar Zebari said in an interview with Iraqiya television.

"The decision about Syria's participation is not our decision, but rather is the decision of the Arab League, and we are committed to the Arab League's decision," he said.

He added that "there is a long time from now until the date of the summit, and by discussion... we will clarify this subject."

Zebari said that the Syrian opposition will also not be invited.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has been carrying out a bloody crackdown on an uprising against his rule, in which the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group says more than 7,600 people have been killed in 11 months.

Arab League member states voted in November to suspend Syria's participation in the Arab League because of the violence.

Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki had said in an interview with Al-Rashid TV broadcast on February 18 that Iraq wanted Syria to participate in the summit if it is not barred from doing so by its suspension from the Arab League.

Zabari also said that Iraq is capable of securing the areas where the summit will be held, after a wave of attacks across the country left 42 people dead and more than 250 wounded on Thursday.

"We gave commitments that we are capable and able to protect the areas and the spaces where the activities of the summit will be held," Zebari said.

An Arab security delegation left on Thursday, and its "evaluation was that there are security challenges but when it comes to the summit, the geographical spaces where the summit will be held are secured and safe," he said.



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Tripoli (AFP) Feb 24, 2012
French Defence Minister Gerard Longuet arrived in Tripoli on Friday on a three-day visit designed to boost cooperation with Libya, an AFP reporter said. The trip comes shortly after the North African nation celebrated the first anniversary of the start of a popular revolt that toppled the regime of Moamer Kadhafi. Longuet is expected to meet senior officials including Mustafa Abdel Jalil ... read more


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