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Syria Faces A Catastrophic Civil War - Russian MFA

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  • Syria Faces A Catastrophic Civil War - Russian MFA

    SYRIA FACES A CATASTROPHIC CIVIL WAR - RUSSIAN MFA

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    April 20, 2012 - 13:54 AMT

    PanARMENIAN.Net - Syria faces a catastrophic civil war if both sides in
    the crisis that has gripped the country for over a year fail to take
    advantage of the current fragile ceasefire there, Russia's Foreign
    Ministry said on Friday, April 20.

    "A very important event in the developments in the country has come
    about," the ministry said in a statement on its website. "The issue
    in Syria now is the choice between a transition towards peaceful,
    nationwide talks or a descent into civil war."

    United Nations envoy Kofi Annan's six-point peace plan for Syria
    stipulated the start of a ceasefire on April 12 in a bid to stop the
    violence the UN says has so far claimed around 9,000 lives.

    But UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said on Thursday that he had seen
    "troubling" evidence of ceasefire violations by both government troops
    and rebel forces. He also said Syria had failed to comply with its
    obligations under Annan's peace plan to withdraw troops and heavy
    weapons from urban areas.

    Russia's Foreign Ministry said on Friday the ceasefire was holding,
    despite "violations and provocations" but warned of a "new circle
    of violence" in the event of its breakdown. Foreign ministers from
    the Friends of Syria coalition, which Russia is not part of, met in
    Paris on Thursday evening. They said later in a statement that the
    ceasefire and Anna's peace plan were the "last hope" of avoiding
    civil war in Syria.

    French President Nikolas Sarkozy accused Assad before the meeting of
    seeking to wipe the rebel city of Homs "off the map."

    The Friends of Syria group, which includes the United States and the
    United Kingdom, suggested earlier this month arming Syrian rebels,
    a proposal that Russia said would merely prolong the conflict.

    Moscow has twice vetoed UN Security Council resolutions over what it
    called pro-rebel bias since the start of an uprising against the rule
    of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in March 2011, but gave its full
    backing to Annan's peace plan.

    Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov also criticized earlier this
    month Assad's handling of the uprising against his rule and said
    Syria needed to be "more decisive" to meet its commitments to Annan's
    peace plan.

    And Ban called on Thursday for an increase in the UN mission to Syria
    to 300 observers. Thirty observers are currently permitted to monitor
    the ceasefire under a UN resolution passed on Saturday, but only six
    are currently on the ground.

    His proposal was backed by Lavrov on Friday.

    "We should do everything possible to pass a second resolution as soon
    as possible to authorize a full-scale monitoring mission to Syria,"
    he said after a meeting with Italian foreign and defense ministers
    on the Syria crisis.

    Russia's Foreign Ministry also said on Friday a delegation from the
    Syrian Popular Front for Change and Liberation opposition movement
    would visit Moscow for talks next week, RIA Novosti reported.



    From: Emil Lazarian | Ararat NewsPress
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