News
Thursday, January 12, 2012
Pakistan against any hasty decision on Syria
NEW YORK: Pakistan cautioned the UN Security Council on Tuesday against taking any hasty decision to deal with the violent protests in Syria and called for allowing the Arab League monitors more time to fully appraise the situation.
Pakistan’s Permanent Representative to the United Nations Abdullah Hussain Haroon spoke during a closed-door meeting of the 15-nation Council after a briefing on the situation in Syria by UN Under Secretary General for Political Affairs Lynn Pascoe, according to diplomatic sources.
Pascoe, citing figures compiled by the UN office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights on the basis of accounts by Syrian and international human rights groups, told the council that more than 400 people had died since the Arab League deployed its team of monitors in Syria on December 27.
In his remarks, the Pakistani envoy said that every effort should be made to get a credible figure of the casualties before taking any decision. He also underscored that any action by the Security Council must not infringe upon the sovereignty and territorial integrity of Syria.
The US ambassador to the UN, Susan Rice, claimed that the rate of killings, about 40 per day, marked an intensification of the crackdown by President Bashar al-Assad’s government since the period preceding the Arab League initiative. “Syria, rather than using the opportunity of its commitment to the Arab League to end the violence and fulfil all of its commitments, is stepping up the violence despite the presence of monitors,” Rice said.
Rice said the United States is concerned by reports that at least two of the monitors of the Arab League today, two Kuwaitis, were roughed up, harmed, harassed and hurt, in the context of their work. Syria’s UN ambassador, Bashar al-Jaafari, countered that the attacks on the Arab monitors were carried out by armed opposition forces, not by pro-government forces.
“There is no Syrian interest whatsoever to harm the credibility and the safety and the security of the Arab envoys”, he said. But most council members, including France, said that the Council would need to wait until the Arab League filed a formal report on its findings in Syria before considering any fresh action. “Everybody agrees that for the moment the only game in town in political terms is the Arab League mediation,” French Ambassador Gerard Araud told reporters.
The Security Council has been unable to act on Syria since early October, when China and Russia vetoed a Western-backed resolution threatening possible sanctions against Damascus if it did not stop the violence. Last month, Russia introduced its own resolution calling for political talks between the government and the opposition. But it has since put that initiative on hold until the Arab League concludes its assessment on January 19. app
Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk
Back to Top