Ban Announces Resignation of Brahimi as U.N.-Arab League Envoy for Syria

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Lakhdar Brahimi has resigned as the U.N. and Arab League mediator for Syria on Tuesday after international efforts to find a political solution to the three-year-old civil war failed.

"I thought we'd be able to deliver but because of divisions we have not been able to make any progress in the course of three years," U.N. Secretary General Ban Ki-moon.

Ban and Brahimi appeared together to announce the resignation, which takes effect at the end of the month.

Ban said he had accepted the resignation "with great regret" and said a replacement for the Algerian diplomat and veteran peace negotiator had not yet been chosen.

Brahimi, who was to meet later in the day to brief senior envoys on the 15-member U.N. Security Council, said he was "very sad ... (to) leave Syria behind in such a bad state."

Ban, however, praised Brahimi, saying he had faced "almost impossible odds" but had "persevered with great patience."

He blamed the Syrian government of President Bashar Assad and the opposition for the failure.

"We were here to help them," he said. "I am urging them again to think of their own future this is their country, their future."

Brahimi was named international mediator of the Syria conflict on August 17, 2012, replacing former U.N. secretary general Kofi Annan, who also failed to obtain a ceasefire.

The 80-year-old managed to get the two sides to meet face to face for the first time early this year in Geneva, only to see the negotiations collapse in the second round.

He himself had said he had not expected much from the talks, which were organized under pressure from Washington, which supports some rebel factions, and Moscow, Assad's main ally.

He had also said Syria's presidential elections scheduled for June 3 would shatter his diplomatic efforts. The rebels would never return to the negotiating table if Assad were re-elected, as seems likely.

Comments 4
Thumb cedre 13 May 2014, 20:10

brahimi good guy ? go ask the algerians about him...

Thumb freedomarch 13 May 2014, 21:09

Syrians are backwards ... ?

Missing national.pact 13 May 2014, 21:46

ya3ni if the best negotiators and peace makers in the World Mr. Ibrahimi and Mr.Annan failed im afraid there would be no one able to do so especially that both the Regime and the Opposition proved to care less about their people and they really do not care how many die or how many are displaced they just care about who will control this strategic area regardless of who's left in it. tfeh 3ala heik jiran

Default-user-icon O. Templar (Guest) 14 May 2014, 01:42

The ongoing Civil war in Syria serves to maintain world peace and protect western civilization.
Statistically, since the beginning of Syrian conflict in 2011 there were hardly any terrorist attacks in the western hemisphere. In fact, all Western born Jihadis have been flocking to Syria, in support of ISIL or Hizb. Syria's civil war is designed to polarize and attract global Jihadis Sunni and Shia alike, each side ironically fighting for survival, willing to sacrifice themselves for the cause.
It would be dangerously regrettable to have a negotiated peace in Syria; this war must be fought till the bitter end.