Syria 'Still Mulling' Arab League Response to Its Conditions

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية W460

The Syrian foreign ministry said Friday that Damascus was still mulling a response it had received from the Arab League to its request for lifting the Arab sanctions as a precondition for allowing foreign observers to enter the country to assess the situation on the ground.

“The foreign ministry has received the response of the secretary general (Nabil al-Arabi) and it is still under scrutiny,” ministry spokesman Jihad Maqdesi said in a statement.

The Arab League sought Iraq's help on Thursday in persuading Syria to allow observers on its soil as part of efforts to end the unrest.

Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari told a joint news conference in Baghdad with Arab League chief Arabi that Iraq would try to convince Syria to accept an Arab peace deal and the deployment of monitors.

"We will exert efforts and discuss with the Syrian government how to remove all the obstacles facing this initiative," said Zebari.

Arabi added: "The ball is in the Syrian court."

Iraq has close trade ties with Syria and has refused to enforce the sweeping sanctions against Damascus approved by the Arab League on November 27 over the Syrian government's deadly crackdown on protests.

The Arab League wants Syria to allow a group of observers in the country to monitor the situation on the ground.

Burhan Ghalioun, who heads the opposition Syrian National Council (SNC), said Assad's conditional acceptance of observers does not amount to meaningful progress, in an interview published Thursday in Brazil's Estado de Sao Paulo daily.

"The president (Assad) is viewed as a murderer by the majority of the Syrian people and any negotiation for a democratic transition requires Assad relinquishing power," Ghalioun said.

Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said the monitors would be allowed to enter the country under certain conditions, according to the text of a letter to Arabi published by Syrian newspapers.

If Syria allows observers into the country all the Arab bloc's sanctions would become "null and void", the letter said.

An Arab League ministerial team is due to meet on Saturday in Qatar to discuss the next move, according to an Arab diplomat.

Comments 3
Default-user-icon Gabby (Guest) 09 December 2011, 23:12

"Mulling" won't cut it ya Bashar!! Jerking everyone won't either. Your response is like how you always dealt with Lebanon, but the world is not Lebanon and the Arab League is not Lebanon. They know your tricks, double speak, and delay tactics.

In the big leagues your game is not going to make it. Maybe your tune will change after the sanctions bite in a little deeper. Think hard before the military options come.

Missing hmorsel 10 December 2011, 03:36

the arabs are so useless, they sit and watch teh poor people in Syria die everyday and they do want to do anything. but when the Us or Nato accidentally bomb and kills one or 2 or 10 people they all rise up in anger , what a bunchg of hypocrits. the arabs and the moslems should now deal a blow to both china and russia because of those 2 no one can do anything about Syria

Missing hmorsel 10 December 2011, 03:36

the arabs are so useless, they sit and watch teh poor people in Syria die everyday and they do want to do anything. but when the Us or Nato accidentally bomb and kills one or 2 or 10 people they all rise up in anger , what a bunchg of hypocrits. the arabs and the moslems should now deal a blow to both china and russia because of those 2 no one can do anything about Syria