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Putin: Russia Arming Legitimate Gov't In Syria, West Arming Organ-Ea

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  • Putin: Russia Arming Legitimate Gov't In Syria, West Arming Organ-Ea

    PUTIN: RUSSIA ARMING LEGITIMATE GOV'T IN SYRIA, WEST ARMING ORGAN-EATERS

    Russian President Vladimir Putin slammed the Western countries
    for arming foreign-backed militants fighting the Syrian government,
    warning that such move contradicts basic human values since the armed
    groups are committing war crimes and crimes against humanity.

    During a joint press conference with British Prime Minister David
    Cameron on Sunday, Putin said: "You will not deny that one does not
    really need to support the people who not only kill their enemies,
    but open up their bodies, eat their intestines in front of the public
    and cameras. Are these the people you want to support? Is it them
    who you want to supply with weapons? Then this probably has little
    relation to humanitarian values that have been preached in Europe
    for hundreds of years."

    Putin was referring to video footage surfaced on the Internet last
    month of a militant eating what appeared to be the heart of a dead
    Syrian soldier.

    In an interview with Time magazine on May 14, the cannibal militant,
    known by his nom de guerre Abu Sakkar, confirmed that the video is
    real and that he did indeed take a bite of the soldier's lung. Human
    Rights Watch said it was a war crime.

    Putin said that Russia by contrast was arming the legitimate government
    of Syria "We are not breaching any rules and norms and we call on
    all our partners to act in the same fashion," he said.

    Speaking after a difficult meeting with Putin in Northern Ireland,
    Cameron claimed both men were in agreement on the need to end the
    human catastrophe of the Syrian crisis. But there was little to
    suggest the two men made progress on how to convene a fresh Syrian
    peace conference in Geneva, let alone who should attend, or its agenda.

    "There are very big differences between the analysis we have of what
    happened in Syria and who is to blame but where there is common ground
    is that we both see a humanitarian catastrophe," Cameron said.

    "What I take from our conversation today is that we can overcome
    these differences if we recognize that we share some fundamental aims:
    to end the conflict, to stop Syria breaking apart, to let the Syrian
    people decide who governs them and to take the fight to the extremists
    and defeat them," he said.

    Source: Agencies

    17-06-2013 - 14:10 Last updated 17-06-2013 - 14:10 | 747 View
    http://www.almanar.com.lb/english/adetails.php?eid=97879&cid=22&fromval=1&frid=22&se ccatid=45&s1=1

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