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Syrian opposition group calls for
revolution
12.7.2012
By Maria Kuchma, RIA Novosti |
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Burhan Ghalioun, a senior member of the opposition
Syrian National Council (SNC). Photo:
AFP
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July
12, 2012
International diplomacy has failed to solve the
Syrian crisis, and revolution is the only way to end
more than a year of bloodshed in the country, Burhan
Ghalioun, a senior member of the opposition Syrian
National Council (SNC), said on Wednesday.
“A revolution will solve the problem, not
negotiations or diplomatic efforts,” Ghalioun, the
former head of the Istanbul-based group, said during
a news conference in Moscow following talks with
Russian Foreign Minster Sergei Lavrov and his deputy
Mikhail Bogdanov.
The situation in Syria “has further shifted toward a
revolution,” he said, adding that none of the
diplomatic initiatives aimed to resolve the bloody
conflict in Syria that have been proposed so far
“have yielded any concrete results.”
The statement came after UN and Arab League envoy
Kofi Annan visited Syria and its main ally Iran
earlier this week in yet another attempt to salvage
his peace plan by persuading the government of
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to end fighting and
launch a dialogue with opposition groups.
The visit came after Annan admitted late last week
that the international community had “not succeeded”
in resolving the conflict by peaceful political
means, and that there was “no guarantee that we will
succeed.”
A proposal put forward during a Syria Action Group
meeting in Geneva in late June, which stipulates the
establishment of a transitional government in Syria
to involve both members of the Assad government and
opposition groups, so far also remains merely on
paper.
Representatives of major Syrian opposition groups
declared that they would not negotiate a transition
unless Assad is excluded from a future government, a
demand supported by Western powers and their Middle
Eastern allies and opposed by Russia.
The position of the SNC members seemed
uncompromising on Wednesday.
“We demand the departure of all representatives of
the current regime, and first of all its leader
Assad,” Abdulbaset Sayda, the newly appointed SNC
head, said. “Any attempt at reconciliation with the
current regime will lead nowhere.”
Russia’s Position
Unchanged?
The SNC leaders said they had asked Russia on
Wednesday to support a UN Security Council action
based on Chapter 7 of the UN Charter, which allows
the council to authorize actions ranging from
diplomatic and economic sanctions to military
intervention.
But “our points of view remain different,” Sayad
said.
“Russian representatives have said that they are not
clinging to Assad, that they act in the interest of
the Syrian people… but when we go into detail, we
see the difference in our positions,” he said.
Russia has blocked Western-led attempts to pass a UN
Security Council resolution imposing harsh sanctions
on Assad's government. Moscow has said it will not
allow a “Libyan scenario” to be repeated in Syria,www.ekurd.net
referring to a NATO military operation that helped
topple Libyan dictator Muammar Gaddafi in October
2011.
Sayda critisized on Wednesday Russia’s arms supplies
to Syria and its decision to send a flotilla of
warships to the Mediterranean.
“The Syrian regime feels support… it feels that Iran
and Moscow are backing it,” Sayda said.
The Russian Defense Ministry said on Tuesday that a
Russian naval task force was on its way to carry out
naval exercises in the Atlantic, Mediterranean and
the Black Sea.
On Wednesday, Vyacheslav Dzirkaln, the deputy head
of Russia’s Federal Service for Military-Technical
Cooperation, said Russian Navy warships will be sent
to defend Russian merchant shipping in the event of
a possible blockade of Syria.
Meanwhile, SNC representative in Russia, Mahmoud Al-Hamza,
said on Wednesday that he believes shifts in
Russia’s position were “already underway,” although
they are still “very slow.”
“I think they may become more apparent in the next
few months,” he told RIA Novosti.
Russia said on Monday that it would not deliver any
new types of weapons or sign any military contracts
with Syria until the situation there stabilizes, in
what some observers described as a sign that
Russia’s position was slowly shifting toward
withdrawing its staunch support for Assad.
“We are not talking about new arms supplies to that
country,” Dzirkaln said. “Until the situation
stabilizes we will not deliver any new weapons.”
Earlier on Wednesday Dzirkaln explained that the
move did not mean that Russia would stop supplying
weapons to Syria under existing contracts.
Copyright ©, respective
author or news agency, rian.ru
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