The Borneo Post

G7, allies seek broad support to isolate Assad

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LUCCA, Italy: The Group of Seven major global powers were joined by Middle East allies yesterday in a push to isolate Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, hours before the US secretary of state flies to Moscow, Assad’s top backer.

G7 foreign ministers sat down early yesterday with their counterpar­ts from Turkey, Saudi Arabia, United Arab Emirates, Jordan and Qatar – all of whom oppose Assad’s rule - to discuss the six-year- old civil war in Syria.

Pressure is building on Russian President Vladimir Putin to break ties with Assad, who stands accused of launching a nerve gas attack on a rebel-held town last week.

On Monday, British Prime Minister Theresa May spoke to US President Donald Trump, with both agreeing that there was ‘a window of opportunit­y’ to persuade Russia to break ties with Assad, May’s office said.

Also on Monday, Britain and Canada said sanctions could be tightened on Moscow if it continued to back Assad.

Later in the day, Trump spoke by phone with German Chancellor Angela Merkel about the US strike last week and thanked her for her support.

“I think we have to show a united position and that in these negotiatio­ns we should do all we can to get Russia out of Assad’s corner, at least to the point that they are ready to participat­e in finding a political solution,” German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel said on Monday.

“It is the right moment to talk

I think we have to show a united position and that in these negotiatio­ns we should do all we can to get Russia out of Assad’s corner, at least to the point that they are ready to participat­e in finding a political solution.

about this, how the internatio­nal community, with Russia, Iran, Saudi Arabia, Europe, with the US, can drive forward a peace process for Syria and avoid further military escalation of the conflict.”

On Friday, the US fired missiles at a Syrian air base in retaliatio­n for the alleged chemical weapons attack by Assad’s government on civilians, including many children.

The US is open to authorisin­g additional strikes on Syria if its government uses chemical weapons again or deploys barrel bombs in the country, the White House said on Monday.

The missile attack has increased expectatio­ns that Trump is ready to adopt a tougher stance with respect to Russia, and that he is ready to engage in world affairs instead of following the more isolationi­st stance he had previously taken.

Up until the chemical attack, Trump had said Washington would no longer act as the world’s guardian, especially if it was not in

Sigmar Gabriel, German Foreign Minister

the interest of the United States.

But on Monday, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson visited the site of a World War Two Nazi massacre in Italy and said Washington would never let such abuses go unchalleng­ed.

“We rededicate ourselves to holding to account any and all who commit crimes against the innocents anywhere in the world,” Tillerson told reporters in Sant’Anna di Stazzema.

G7 efforts to build a united front against Assad comes just ahead of Tillerson’s trip to Moscow, the first for a high-ranking Trump administra­tion official.

Russia has rejected accusation­s that Assad used chemical arms against his own people and has said it will not cut its ties with the Syrian president.

That means Tillerson, who has significan­t business experience with Russia as a former chief executive at Exxon Mobil but none in government, is about to face his toughest test yet in internatio­nal diplomacy. — Reuters

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 ??  ?? (From right) Tillerson, Britain’s Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel, and Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Fumio Kishida attend roundtable talks during a G7 for foreign ministers in Lucca. — Reuters photo
(From right) Tillerson, Britain’s Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, German Foreign Minister Sigmar Gabriel, and Japanese Minister of Foreign Affairs Fumio Kishida attend roundtable talks during a G7 for foreign ministers in Lucca. — Reuters photo

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