Debate between Russian, Qatari FMs Erupts in Cairo over Syria

إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربية
  • W460
  • W460

Arab and Russian foreign ministers met in Cairo on Saturday over Syria, amid splits over how to move forward to resolve a crisis that has left thousands dead in a year.

The meetings come as the West and the Arab world pile pressure on President Bashar Assad's regime to end a year-old uprising spiraling into all-out civil war.

Beijing and Moscow have used their veto powers as permanent members of the U.N. Security Council to block resolutions condemning the crackdown, because they singled out Assad for blame.

"Today, the most urgent is to end all violence irrespective of where it came from," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov told his Arab counterparts.

He said both the government and the armed groups had to vacate Syrian cities and towns.

But Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani, Qatar's foreign minister, said the killings of civilians in Syria amounted to "genocide" and that a ceasefire was "not enough."

"The Syrian regime is committing systematic genocide while we talk of a ceasefire," Sheikh Hamad said.

"After all the killing, we cannot just talk of a ceasefire," he said, demanding "accountability" for those responsible for the violence.

Sheikh Hamad said "the time has come to apply the proposal to send Arab and international troops to Syria," while calling for the recognition of the Syrian National Council as the Syrian people's "legitimate representative."

"When we went to the Security Council, we did not get a resolution because of the Russian-Chinese veto, which sent a wrong message to the Syrian regime," he said, warning that "our patience and the patience of the world has run out."

Saudi Foreign Minister Saud al-Faisal said the U.N. veto allowed the "brutality" to continue.

The stand of "the countries that thwarted the U.N. Security Council resolution and voted against the resolution of the General Assembly on Syria gave the Syrian regime a license to extend its brutal practices against the Syrian people, without compassion or mercy," he said.

Lavrov insisted his country is "not protecting any regime; we are protecting international law."

The Russian foreign minister arrived on Friday and held talks individually with some of the Arab ministers.

Comments 6
Default-user-icon + oua nabka + (Guest) 10 March 2012, 14:45

ya mr Hamad just give the good example and turn qatar into democracy now

Thumb primesuspect 10 March 2012, 14:59

Arabs need to take the matter into their own hands and send their armies to free the oppressed in Syria. The UN or NATO won't lift a finger as bachar is Israel's ally.

Default-user-icon Snatch (Guest) 10 March 2012, 15:47

Hey prime !!! why do we care?as long as they keep away from us to ... with them,we suffered 30 years,let them have a taste of their own medicine no???

Default-user-icon arturo (Guest) 10 March 2012, 16:22

If Bashar is Israel's ally then he is there to stay. No power on earth can remove him. Wake up people and smell the air. Since Natanyahu met with Obama the US talk has shifted from wanting to help the Syrian people to not willing to interfere.

Default-user-icon Murad (Guest) 10 March 2012, 17:56

Lol, headline says debate erupts, then quotes like only one sentence from what Lavrov said. In reality, Lavrov put Hamad back in his place: the dog house.

Default-user-icon N (Guest) 11 March 2012, 12:26

Bashar will see a fate far worse than the dog house trust me... The syrian people are going to shove a stethascope up his ass before killing him...