The story appears on

Page A9

July 11, 2012

GET this page in PDF

Free for subscribers

View shopping cart

Related News

Home » World

Annan unveils Assad plan to end Syria strife

SYRIAN President Bashar Assad has suggested ending Syria's conflict on a step-by-step basis, starting with districts that have suffered the worst violence, international mediator Kofi Annan said yesterday.

The former United Nations secretary general met Assad in Damascus on Monday, launching a round of shuttle diplomacy to try to revive his moribund plan for ending Syria's 16-month-old uprising in which rebels are fighting to topple Assad.

Speaking to reporters after talks in Iran, Annan said that Assad had proposed "building an approach from the ground up in some of the districts where we have extreme violence - to try and contain the violence in those districts and, step by step, build up and end the violence across the country."

Annan, who represents the UN and the Arab League, said he needed to discuss the proposal with the Syrian opposition and could not give further details.

It was not clear how or where he planned to do this with opposition leaders, who say there can be no peaceful transition unless Assad, who tried to crush popular protests by armed force from the moment they began, relinquishes power first.

After talks with Iranian Foreign Minister Ali Akbar Salehi, Annan flew to Baghdad, Iraq. He will present the conclusions of his tour to the UN Security Council in New York today, according to the French Foreign Ministry.

Russia proposed what sounded like an alternative to the Western-backed, anti-Assad "Friends of Syria" forum, with an offer to visiting Syrian opposition groups to host regular meetings of Annan's own "action group" of states, which is more balanced between pro- and anti-Assad influences.

"We would welcome the organization of a regular session of an 'action group' in Moscow ... In any case we see the relevance in carrying out such an event," Interfax news agency quoted Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov as saying.

The Syrian National Council - the main opposition umbrella group in exile - will hold talks today with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov. Its delegation of 10 members is led by the group's chief, Abdelbasset Sida.

Major powers agreed at a meeting with Annan on June 30 that a transitional government should be set up in Syria, but remain at odds over what part Assad might play in the process.

Russia says no transition plan can pre-suppose that Assad, whose family has ruled Syria for 42 years, will step down. But Western powers and allied Gulf Arab states say he must go, and Syrian opposition groups say that is their basic condition.

The activist Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 17,129 people have been killed in Syria's increasingly sectarian revolt pitting rebels from the Sunni Muslim majority against Assad's Alawites, related to Shiite Islam.

It said 11,897 civilians or armed insurgents had been killed by Assad's forces, but that it could not determine how many fell into each category. The Syrian government has not given a death toll for security forces for several months.





 

Copyright © 1999- Shanghai Daily. All rights reserved.Preferably viewed with Internet Explorer 8 or newer browsers.

沪公网安备 31010602000204号

Email this to your friend