Source: Russia Today
The ongoing violence in Syria is the main issue at the
67th UN General Assembly. Despite calls by the UN chief to end the violence,
Qatar urged an Arab-led military intervention in the country and Western
leaders pledged support for rebel groups.
“The Security Council failed to reach an effective
position. In view of this, I think that it is better for the Arab countries
themselves to interfere,” said Sheik Hamad bin Khalifa al-Thani, the Emir of
Qatar. Al-Thani urged neighboring nations to act “out of their national,
humanitarian, political and military duties” and bring an end to the
violence in Syria.
Earlier, Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem
al-Thani said in an interview with CNN that a no-fly zone over Syria is needed
as a “Plan B.”
Western leaders have taken a uniformly hard line on what
they see as the need to oust Syrian president Bashar al-Assad. French President
Francois Hollande called on the UN to immediately provide protection for Syrian
opposition groups and rebel-held territories.
“I know one thing is certain: The Syrian regime will
never again take its place in the council of nations,” Hollande said. “Without
any delay, I call upon the United Nations to provide immediately to the Syrian
people all the support it asks of us and to protect liberated zones.”
“How many more deaths will we wait for before we act? How
can we let the paralysis of the United Nations continue?” he said, likely
alluding to three instances where Russia and China vetoed UN Security Council
resolutions on Syria they deemed biased.
In August, France began channeling aid to Syria’s
rebel-held regions. While Hollande called for Western and Arab countries to
intervene in Syria, he also criticized Iran for doing just that: "It
is clear that we have all the proof we need that Iran is intervening by human
and material means in Syria, and this is unacceptable."
Hollande also reiterated his promise to recognize a
“provisional Syrian government,” a step that could lead to direct military
support for the Syrian rebels.
US President Barack Obama leveled further harsh criticism
against Assad: "As we meet here, we again declare that the regime of
Bashar al-Assad must come to an end so that the suffering of the Syrian people
can stop and a new dawn can begin.”
The US and its allies frequently call for sanctions and
regime change in Syria. Other countries, like Russia and China, favor
diplomacy.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon took a balanced stance,
arguing in his opening statement that the international community must “stop
the violence and flows of arms to both sides, and set in motion a Syrian-led
transition as soon as possible.”
UN and Arab League envoy to Syria Lakhdar Brahimi
expressed interest in “maintaining active contacts” with Moscow,
Russia's Deputy Foreign Minister said after FM Sergey Lavrov held a bilateral
meeting with Brahimi on the sidelines of the General Assembly. Russia invited
Brahimi to Moscow in the coming months in the hopes of crafting a plan to
resolve the Syria crisis.
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