Gulf News

The West can still shape peace in Syria

Western nations, that are permanent members of Security Council, must use their influence to protect civilians

- By David Miliband ■ David Miliband is the president and chief executive of Internatio­nal Rescue Committee.

The seven years of Syria’s crisis have cost half a million lives, displaced more than five million people and reordered the geopolitic­s of the Middle East. But the worst may be yet to come. Western policymake­rs cannot be allowed to turn the other way and need to show their mettle when the United Nations Security Council (UNSC) meets on Syria this month.

In June, Syrian President Bashar Al Assad’s forces stormed the southweste­rn region of Syria, where the uprising began. Within weeks, they took control of the border crossings with Jordan that had been used by aid agencies to supply crossborde­r aid to hundreds of thousands of Syrians in desperate need. My organisati­on, the Internatio­nal Rescue Committee, with its network of Syrian partner organisati­ons, was the largest health-care provider in southern Syria.

Now we are shut out, with no access to those people in need. And we don’t know the fate of those we were serving. The assurances from the Syrian government inspire little confidence in light of the conditions in other areas previously retaken by the regime (like Ghouta, east of Damascus). Even humanitari­an partners authorised to work inside Syria have yet to receive permission from the Al Assad government to deliver much-needed aid into many areas that have newly fallen under government control.

Humanitari­an aid has been blocked, but the needs are likely growing, given the brutality of the offensive to retake Daraa, which drove hundreds of thousands of Syrians from their homes in just a matter of days. These population­s are highly vulnerable to retaliatio­n attacks as Al Assad’s government reasserts its control, which could include forced military conscripti­on, denial of humanitari­an aid and sexual abuses against women and young girls.

With aid agencies banished and crossborde­r humanitari­an access now lost, the UNSC should demand unfettered humanitari­an access to the south, to monitor the protection of Syrian civilians and the fair distributi­on of aid. Any crime committed must be recorded, with full accountabi­lity for perpetrato­rs under internatio­nal law. And both humanitari­an workers and recipients of humanitari­an aid, who lived for years under opposition control, must not face any consequenc­es now that they live under government control.

Equal attention must also now turn to the northwest of Syria around Idlib. This is where there is the greatest risk of a new humanitari­an disaster. Armed opposition groups from elsewhere in the country have been deported there under so-called reconcilia­tion agreements and are preparing for a last stand against the Al Assad regime. Standing between rebels and the regime are 2.6 million civilians, half of whom have already been displaced at least once by fighting. One million and seven hundred thousand people need humanitari­an aid to survive. Almost 70,000 have fled from the horrors of Eastern Ghouta.

One-off deals are dangerous

Russia has made itself a central player in the Syrian war. At the end of last month, it met with Turkey and Iran in Sochi, Russia, to discuss the prospects in Idlib. But oneoff deals to plan military offensives, not protect civilians, are dangerous. They have excluded the UN and sidelined its peacemakin­g process.

The UNSC needs to reassert itself. It is vital that the western countries that are permanent members of the UNSC — the United States, France and Britain (P3) — use their voice and influence to protect civilians in northwest Syria. The P3 must demand, first, that the parties involved should suspend any planned attacks and revitalise UN-led peace talks. De-escalation areas and reconcilia­tion agreements have not protected Syrians or humanitari­an law — the two biggest victims of this long and lawless war.

Second, the Turkish military’s 12 observatio­n posts in Idlib should be opened to UN officials to deter any abuses of internatio­nal humanitari­an law. Turkey should allow full humanitari­an access to northwest Syria across its border.

Third, there must also be a backstop guarantee that, in the case of any conflict, there must be safe routes and an open border into Turkey for civilians running for their lives.

Al Assad and the Russian government want to play by their own rules to win the war and then get the West to pay for rebuilding Syria. They need to be disabused of this illusion. Critically, it must be made clear that without a comprehens­ive, genuine and inclusive political transition as a product of negotiatio­ns in Geneva, and guarantees for Syrians’ safety now, western funding for reconstruc­tion aid for a post-conflict Syria remains off the table.

There is leverage in western money, but also in western presence.

Syrians have paid the price for their president’s impunity. Al Assad is in a stronger position now than he has been in years. Someone needs to stand up now for the lesson that winning the war is not the same as winning peace.

 ?? Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News ??
Luis Vazquez/©Gulf News

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