Quotes: US MENA   Enter Symbol: NewsLetter: Search: advanced

Turkey seeks world action on Syria as Homs bleeds  Join our daily free Newsletter

MENAFN - Jordan Times - 09/02/2012

No. of Ratings : 0
Digg This Article: http%3a%2f%2fwww.menafn.com%2fmenafn%2fqn_news_story_s.aspx%3fstoryid%3d1093481687 Share This Article: http%3a%2f%2fwww.menafn.com%2fmenafn%2fqn_news_story_s.aspx%3fstoryid%3d1093481687 Add to Delicious Seed this article Buzz this article Add to Reddit Add to furl Add to stumbleupon Add to Mixx!


 


(MENAFN - Jordan Times) Syria's army pounded the rebel city of Homs on Wednesday as Turkey sought international action to protect civilians from former ally President Bashar Assad, a move that risks the wrath of Russia and China.

Dozens more were killed during the day, according to the opposition, drawing comparison with the plight of Benghazi which triggered Western attacks on Libya last year and accelerating a global diplomatic showdown whose outcome is far from clear.

"I've seen whole families killed this week," an activist called Ahmed told Reuters from Homs, the scene of one of the bloodiest government onslaughts in the 11-month-old revolt against Assad. "Now I feel like I'm just waiting to be the next to die," added the accountant aged 28.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told Reuters before flying to Washington for talks on Syria that Turkey, which once saw Assad as a valuable ally but now wants him out, could no longer stand and watch and wanted to host an international meeting to agree ways to end the killing and provide aid.

"It is not enough being an observer," he said. "It is time now to send a strong message to the Syrian people that we are with them," he added, while refusing to comment on what kind of action Turkey or its allies would be prepared to consider.

Syrian army tanks and artillery pounded areas of Homs where the revolt had flourished, demolishing buildings where people were living, short of water, food and medical supplies and pinned down by sharpshooters on rooftops.

Syrian state media blamed foreign-backed "terrorists" for killing 30 security personnel on Tuesday and causing an explosion that set a refinery ablaze.

"All the international community should work together to help," Davutoglu said. "Especially those who cannot even go from one street to another in Homs. You have pictures of children running from one house to another house while under artillery attack... They cannot continue these methods of oppression."

Russia and China, which let the United Nations support the air campaign in Libya, provoked strong condemnation from the US, European powers and other Arab governments when they vetoed a much less interventionist resolution in the Security Council last week that called on Assad to step down.

While Moscow sees him as a buyer of arms and host to a Soviet-era naval base, for both Russia and China, Syria is also a test case for efforts to resist UN encroachment on sovereign governments' freedom to deal with rebels as they see fit.

Campaigning for next month's presidential election, Prime Minister Vladimir Putin said: "A cult of violence has been coming to the fore in international affairs.... This cannot fail to cause concern."

"We of course condemn all violence regardless of its source, but one cannot act like an elephant in a china shop."

"Help them, advise them, limit, for instance, their ability to use weapons but not interfere under any circumstances."

It is unclear what Turkey, a NATO member and rising Muslim, democratic force in the Middle East, could do to bring Moscow into any international initiative alongside those regional and world powers which have sided with the rebels against Assad.

"Now it is still time for diplomatic efforts, and we are using all diplomatic means," Davutoglu told Reuters when asked when Turkey, which has taken in refugees and rebel commanders, might envisage sending its own forces across the border.

Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan, who had described the Russian and Chinese veto at the UN as a "fiasco", telephoned outgoing Russian President Dmitry Medvedev on Wednesday and afterward issued a statement repeating that Assad had lost "legitimacy".

The Kremlin said Medvedev told Erdogan that the search for a solution should continue, including in the Security Council, but that foreign interference was not an option.

Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, who visited Assad in Damascus on Tuesday, said the president's opponents should sit down and talk with him.

Medvedev also spoke with French President Nicolas Sarkozy asking him and other Western countries to avoid "hasty, unilateral moves" towards Syria and said that the position of the international community should be "balanced and objective", the Kremlin said.

As the diplomatic gears turned, the military offensive in Homs and elsewhere showed no sign of let up.

Activists in the city also accused militiamen of slaughtering three families in their homes.

The day's death toll stood at over 100, activists said, offering figures that could not be independently verified.

The UN's top human rights official called on Wednesday for urgent international action.

Navi Pillay, High Commissioner for Human Rights, said: "I am appalled by the Syrian government's wilful assault on the city of Homs, and its use of artillery and other heavy weaponry in what appear to be indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas in the city."

Speaking by satellite phone from the beleaguered Baba Amro neighbourhood, activist Hussein Nader said the bombardment has lessened on the district by dusk but that tanks had moved closer to the besieged area, where 30,000 inhabitants have been without water, electricity or telephone lines days.

He said bombardments have killed 42 civilians on Wednesday with many others wounded.

"There are neighbourhoods on the eastern side of Baba Amro that are disaster zones from heavy shelling apparently designed to open the way for tanks."

"Dozens of people are under the rubble with no way to get to them because they are firing at anyone who moves in the street."

He said activists were trying to distribute water in bottles but that bandages and antiseptics had run out.

Asked about resistance in the district, Nader said the Free Syrian Army was outgunned and that fighters were laying low, awaiting an impending tank infantry onslaught on the district.

The onslaught on Homs has not relented despite a promise to end the bloodshed that the Syrian leader gave to Russia.

French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe dismissed Syrian pledges of peace as deceit, "and we're not going to fall for it".

A group known as the Syrian Revolution General Commission called in a statement in the afternoon for outside humanitarian protection and that the day's death toll stood at 100.

Syrian opposition figures, who said Lavrov had brought no new initiative, spurn Assad's promises of reform as meaningless while his troops are killing civilians and say he must go.

Walid Al Bunni, a senior member of the opposition Syrian National Council (SNC), dismissed Lavrov's dialogue proposal.

"The Arab initiative is clear. Assad must step down and Syrians will then be ready to sit together at a table with whoever succeeds him to discuss a democratic transition," the head of the SNC's foreign policy committee told Reuters.

Among other points of pressure, a senior EU diplomat said European Union governments had reached an agreement in principle to impose sanctions on the Syrian central bank this month as part of new measures intended to force Assad out.

In Cairo, a representative of a Gulf Arab state to the Arab League told Reuters that military intervention, such as that backed by Qatar and other Arab states in Libya, should be an option: "There are many alternatives and among them is sending peacekeeping troops whether Arab or international."

"The mission of such forces in case they were sent would be to create safe zones to protect civilians and prevent the Syrian army from entering them," the Arab diplomat said, adding that an arms embargo should also be considered.

"We should think about a clear mechanism to restrain the Syrian army," he said. "The Syrians have taken the Russian and Chinese veto as a licence to kill.''

 






  MENA News Headlines
May 23 2013Salman, Erdogan discuss Mideast ,Arab News
(MENAFN - Arab News) Crown Prince Salman, deputy premier and minister of defense, held talks here with Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan on the latest developments in the Middle East. ...

May 23 2013Prince Saud says Iran indulging in deception ,Arab News
(MENAFN - Arab News) The presence of an Iranian espionage cell in Saudi Arabia exemplifies Tehran's hostile attitude toward the Kingdom, said Foreign Minister Prince Saud Al-Faisal yesterday. "No ...

May 23 2013Saudi- Powdered milk makers seek price hike OK ,Arab News
(MENAFN - Arab News)  A group of powdered milk producers has requested the Ministry of Commerce's authorization to raise the prices of their products ahead of Ramadan. One firm has already gone ...

May 23 2013Saudi- SAGIA to offer set of privileges to investors ,Arab News
(MENAFN - Arab News) The Saudi Arabian General Investment Authority's (SAGIA) board of directors discussed at its meeting recently a number of topics, including the Kingdom's efforts in sustaining a ...

May 23 2013Saudi- Cement crisis recurs in Eastern Region ,Arab News
(MENAFN - Arab News) The cement crisis is reappearing in the Eastern Region as a number of distributors are increasing their prices to consumers by up to 25 percent with a normal bag sold at SR 20 ...

May 23 2013Saudi- Alwaleed, Baird discuss investment ,Arab News
(MENAFN - Arab News) Prince Alwaleed bin Talal, chairman of Kingdom Holding Company (KHC), received Nick Baird, chief executive of UK Trade & Investment (UKTI) and an accompanying delegation at his ...

May 23 2013Saudi- Multi-investment sector advances 1.16% ,Arab News
(MENAFN - Arab News) The Saudi stock market recorded nominal gains yesterday, as the Tadawul All-Share Index (TASI) closed higher to 7,363.13, adding 7.86 points or 0.11 percent for the entire ...

May 23 2013New GCC tobacco tax could fuel growth of illicit trade ,Arab News
(MENAFN - Arab News) The dilemma facing GCC finance ministers as they deliberate over a 100 percent increase in duty on tobacco products is underlined by a White Paper published yesterday which ...

May 23 2013Saudi- SAMA considers regulating mortgage rates ,Arab News
(MENAFN - Arab News)  Saudi Arabian Monetary Agency (SAMA) is considering new regulations to unify mortgage rates, which all banks and finance companies have to follow. "SAMA aims to regulate the ...

May 23 2013Abha becomes Air Arabia's 8th Saudi destination ,Arab News
(MENAFN - Arab News) Air Arabia's, described as the first and largest low-cost carrier (LCC) in the MENA, has started operating to Abha from its primary hub in Sharjah. The new service marks the ...

more...


 
Click to Apply






Google

 
 

Middle East North Africa - Financial Network

MENAFN News Market Data Countries Tools Section  
 

Middle East North Africa - Financial Network
Arabic MENAFN

Main News
News By Industry
News By Country
Marketwatch News
UPI News
Comtex News

IPO News
Islamic Finance News
Private Equity News

How-To Guides
Technology Section

Travel Section

Search News

Market Indices
Quotes & Charts

Global Indices
Arab Indices

US Markets Details

Commodoties

Oil & Energy

Currencies Cross Rates
Currencies Updates
Currency Converter

USA Stocks
Arab Stocks
 

Algeria 
Bahrain 
Egypt 
Iraq
Jordan 
Kuwait 
Lebanon
Morocco 
Oman 
Palestine
Qatar 
Saudi Arabia 
Syria
Tunisia 
UAE 
Yemen

Weather
Investment Game
Economic Calendar
Financial Glossary

My MENAFN
Portfolio Tracker

Voting

Financial Calculators

RSS Feeds [XML]

Corporate Monitor

Events

Real Estate
Submit Your Property

Arab Research
Buy a Research

Press Releases
Submit your PR

Join Newsletters


 
© 2000 menafn.com All Rights Reserved.  Terms of Service | Privacy Policy | Contact Us | Advertise | About MENAFN | Career Opportunities | Feedback | Help