Paris Says SNC a Legitimate Syria Interlocutor, Chief Rejects Attacks on Army

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

France will ask its EU partners to consider setting up humanitarian corridors in Syria, Foreign Minister Alain Juppe said Thursday after talks with Burhan Ghalioun, head of the opposition Syrian National Council.

Juppe said France considered the SNC a "legitimate interlocutor" and he would take to Brussels the idea of protected escape routes for Syrian civilians fleeing the crackdown of the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.

"We examined the question of humanitarian corridors and I will ask the next meeting of the European Council to put this point on its agenda," Juppe said.

"If there could be a humanitarian dimension to the zones, which could be secured, to protect the population, that's a question that must be studied with the European Union and the Arab League," he said.

There have been reports that Turkey and NATO allies such as France are considering imposing a no-fly zone and a buffer zone on Syrian territory to give the opposition breathing space while it organizes its revolt.

No official source has gone this far, however, and Juppe's statement was the first sign that something of the sort might be envisaged.

"The Syrian National Council is the legitimate interlocutor, and we will continue to work with it," Juppe said, stopping short of formally recognizing the body and stressing that it must be inclusive.

"We are working on a formal recognition with the Arab League and all of our allies," Juppe said.

The SNC headed by Paris-based Ghalioun is one of at least four Syrian opposition movements, but is seen as the most representative and claims to speak for activists both inside and outside the country.

Speaking to reporters after the joint news conference, Ghalioun said the SNC did not want to see the fledgling Free Syrian Army, an armed rebel group, take the fight directly to the regime's far superior forces.

"We would like this army to carry out defensive actions to protect those who have left the (regime's) army and peaceful demonstrations, but not take on offensive actions against the army," he said.

In recent weeks there have been increasing reports that a rebel army has begun fighting Assad's regime in parallel to a largely peaceful street revolt that has faced brutal repression from regular forces.

This has increased fears the nine-month old revolt against the regime is slipping towards civil war. Four more civilians were killed on Wednesday, in a conflict which the United Nations says has claimed more than 3,500 lives.

Syria's northern neighbor Turkey warned, meanwhile, that the crisis was at "the point of no return" amid a growing chorus of international anger over the eight-month crackdown on dissent.

Comments 2
Default-user-icon Rhumba (Guest) 23 November 2011, 19:46

This corridor shall be used to "humanitarially" pass through them Sunni crazies into Syria. Good luck.

Default-user-icon BullsEye (Guest) 23 November 2011, 21:56

to Rhmba,
Well , Syria did the same to its neighbors in the past in North Lebanon and Iraq, and now probably will be give a medicine of its own.
What goes around comes around!