The United States on Wednesday accused Syria's President Bashar
al-Assad of failing to fulfill a pledge to respect a UN-Arab League
peace plan.
State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland assailed the Syrian
leader, telling reporters that "Assad has not taken the necessary steps
to implement" the peace plan crafted by former UN secretary general Kofi
Annan.
Washington is concerned over "arrests and violence continuing in
Syria today," Nuland said, vowing to "keep the pressure on Assad."
"We will judge him on his actions, not his promises," the spokesperson said.
Nuland made her remarks as her boss, US Secretary of State Hillary
Clinton, prepared to attend global talks Sunday on Syria in Istanbul,
Turkey.
Annan said on Tuesday that Assad's government had accepted his plan, a move cautiously welcomed by Western nations.
The plan calls for a commitment to stop all armed violence, a daily
two-hour humanitarian ceasefire and media access to all areas affected
by the fighting in Syria.
The plan also calls for an inclusive Syrian-led political process, a
right to demonstrate, and the release of people detained arbitrarily.
The disparate Syrian opposition is to attend Sunday's meeting which
will also draw top officials from dozens of Arab and Western countries
eager to end the violence in Syria.
Ahead of the gathering the main opposition Syrian National Council
(SNC), an umbrella for many groups, unveiled a proposal highlighting
human rights and respect for minorities.
But dissent broke out among participants from the start of the
meeting in Istanbul, with human rights activist Haitham al-Maleh
withdrawing from the talks and accusing the SNC of not respecting others
and imposing its will.
The National Coordination Committee for Democratic Change, which
groups Arab nationalist parties, Kurds and socialists, shunned the
gathering. Also absent were a small group of intellectuals, including
the prominent scholar Michel Kilo.
Clinton said before the first Friends of Syria meeting in Tunis last
month that the SNC will demonstrate there is "an alternative" to the
Assad regime, stopping well short of recognizing them as the sole
opposition movement.
-AFP/NOW Lebanon
No comments:
Post a Comment