Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov (AFP Photo /
Timothy A. Clary)
Source: Russia Today
Those who insist on a ceasefire only by the Syrian
government encourage the opposition to intensify its hostilities, and “take
upon themselves an enormous responsibility,” Russian FM Sergey Lavrov said in a
speech to the UN General Assembly.
The shortest way to stop the loss of life in Syria, Lavrov
said, is to adhere to the commitments in the Geneva communique, which were
agreed upon by the Action Group as follow-up of the Kofi Annan Plan.
“We proposed to adopt a resolution in the UN Security
Council that would endorse the Geneva communique as the basis for negotiations
at the beginning of the transitional period, but this proposal had been
blocked,” Lavrov noted.
“Those who oppose the implementation of the Geneva
communique,” he explained, “in fact push Syria even deeper into
the abyss of bloody sectarian strife.”
Lavrov noted that the deepening of internal conflict in
Syria is of particular concern because the militarization of the conflict is
combined with open calls for foreign intervention.
“We have consistently called for the consolidated efforts
of the international community to compel the government and its opponents to
immediately cease the violence and come to the negotiating table,” Lavrov said,
adding that so far, there has been no progress in reaching unanimity on how to
create conditions towards achieving that goal.
The foreign minister also expressed concern about the
growing number of war crimes on both sides of the conflict, as recorded in a
recent report by the UN Human Rights Council.
“Extremist organizations including al-Qaeda have become
more active in Syria – they perpetrate terrorist attacks against innocent
civilians and civil infrastructure,” Lavrov said.
The situation in the region requires the international
community to use a comprehensive approach, and to reject “simplified and
ideology-driven patterns and double standards,” the FM asserted.
He also condemned any unilateral sanctions “imposed
by a state or a group of states sidestepping the United Nations to advance
their political goals.”
“We have no doubt that such sanctions, especially when
they are applied extra-territorially, weaken the unity of the international
community and undermine the effectiveness of its efforts,” Lavrov said,
adding that the events of recent years have clearly shown that “unilateral
actions that violate international law and go beyond the decisions of the UN
Security Council or distort the substance of these decisions do not do any
good.”
He urged the UN to discuss the consequences of such
actions and to resume discussions on the humanitarian limits of sanctions, a
topic that, he said, somehow “faded away” in the UN.
Meanwhile on Friday, US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton said Washington would contribute an additional $15 million in
“non-lethal gear” to the “civilian opposition” trying to oust Assad. Another
$30 million will be sent in humanitarian assistance to help people affected by
the continuing conflict, Clinton said at a Friends of Syria meeting on the
sidelines of the UNGA.
"It is no secret that our attempts to move forward
at the UN Security Council have been blocked repeatedly, but the United States
is not waiting," Clinton said.
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