Albuquerque Journal

UN to vote on cease-fire in Syria

U.S. Ambassador Haley accuses Russia of stalling

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

UNITED NATIONS — The U.N. Security Council delayed a vote on a resolution demanding a 30-day humanitari­an cease-fire across Syria until today in hopes of closing a gap over the timing for a halt to fighting.

Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia has called an immediate cease-fire unrealisti­c.

After six hours of negotiatio­ns, Kuwait’s U.N. Ambassador Mansour AlOtaiba, the current council president, told reporters Friday evening that members “are so close” to agreement, and negotiatio­ns are continuing.

He said the council will meet at 10 a.m. MST today and there will be a vote.

The resolution sponsored by Kuwait and Sweden calls for a cease-fire to take effect 72 hours after its adoption, followed immediatel­y by access for humanitari­an convoys and medical teams to evacuate the critically ill and wounded.

It states that 5.6 million people in 1,244 communitie­s are in “acute need,” including 2.9 million in hard-to-reach and besieged locations.

A Russian-proposed amendment, which the sponsors rejected, would have ruled out an immediate cease-fire. Instead, it would have demanded that all parties “stop hostilitie­s as soon as possible” and work for a “humanitari­an pause” for at least 30 days.

Sweden’s U.N. Ambassador Olof Skoog echoed AlOtaiba, telling reporters that council members have been “very, very close” to agreement — “but we have not been able to close the gap completely.”

“We all agree there needs to be a cease-fire and it has to be urgent, immediatel­y,” he said. “There are still some discussion­s on exactly how to define that. So that’s what we’re working on.”

Skoog said he was “extremely frustrated” that the council was unable to adopt the resolution on Thursday or Friday because the situation on the ground is dire and demands immediate council action.

U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley, who did not participat­e in Friday’s negotiatio­ns, tweeted: “Unbelievab­le that Russia is stalling a vote on a ceasefire allowing humanitari­an access in Syria. How many more people will die before the Security Council agrees to take up this vote?”

Sweden and Kuwait, and their council supporters, have been pressing for immediate action as deaths mount in a Syrian bombing campaign in the rebel-held suburbs of Damascus known as eastern Ghouta.

“It is about saving lives,” Sweden’s Skoog said earlier. “U.N. convoys and evacuation teams are ready to go. It’s time for the council to come together and shoulder its responsibi­lity to urgently avert a situation that is beyond words in its desperatio­n.”

The draft resolution would authorize one exemption from the cease-fire.

It would allow attacks directed at extremists from the Islamic State group and all al-Qaida affiliates including the Nusra Front to continue. The Syrian government and its Russian allies say they are pursuing Islamic extremists they call “terrorists” — and U.S.-backed forces are also going after IS and al-Qaida militants.

 ?? SYRIAN CIVIL DEFENSE WHITE HELMETS/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A member of the Syrian Civil Defense group carries a girl who was wounded during shelling by Syrian government forces, in Ghouta, near Damascus, Syria.
SYRIAN CIVIL DEFENSE WHITE HELMETS/ASSOCIATED PRESS A member of the Syrian Civil Defense group carries a girl who was wounded during shelling by Syrian government forces, in Ghouta, near Damascus, Syria.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States