Los Angeles Times

U.N. delays vote on truce in Syria

World leaders urge Russia to support plan to end bombing of civilian enclave.

- By Tracy Wilkinson and Alexandra Zavis

WASHINGTON — As Syrian warplanes continued to bombard a civilian enclave outside Damascus, killing hundreds, key European leaders demanded a cease-fire Friday while the United Nations struggled to bring Russia on board with the plan to end the carnage.

The U.N. Security Council scheduled, then postponed, then reschedule­d a vote on a 30-day cease-fire, but by nightfall in New York, no agreement had been reached.

Voices calling for urgent action, however, were abundant.

French President Emmanuel Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel sent Russian President Vladimir Putin a joint letter Friday calling on his country to support the Security Council resolution.

“It is now time to act,” the two leaders said in a statement.

War monitors say more than 400 people have been killed and 2,000 injured since the Syrian government, backed by Russia, escalated its bombardmen­t Sunday of the densely populated rebelheld enclave known as eastern Ghouta. Bombing continued Friday.

Among the dead are at least 99 children, according to the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a proopposit­ion watchdog based in Britain.

Scores of people have also been killed in rebel

‘The statistics are staggering, but many can still be saved, and this is our priority today.’

shelling of residentia­l neighborho­ods in the capital, Damascus.

The government­s of Syrian President Bashar Assad and Russia and their ally, Iran, have sought to justify the bombardmen­t of Ghouta by saying antigovern­ment rebels there are shelling Damascus. ProAssad officials refer to those rebels as terrorists who they say are affiliated with Al Qaeda.

But the internatio­nal community insists that Syrian and Russian attacks are indiscrimi­nate, target medical facilities and civilian infrastruc­ture, and are blocking the delivery of badly needed medicines, food and other aid.

Macron and Merkel acknowledg­ed the attacks on civilians in Damascus, as well as on the Russian Embassy there, but said that such actions did “not set aside the obligation and responsibi­lity to protect the civilian population in eastern Ghouta and elsewhere.”

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres said the estimated 400,000 people in eastern Ghouta were living “in hell on earth.”

Robert Mardini, regional Near and Middle East director for the Internatio­nal Committee for the Red Cross, told reporters in Beirut that the organizati­on was shocked by the level of violence in eastern Ghouta.

“The statistics are staggering, but many can still be saved, and this is our priority today,” he said. “We need to deliver badly needed supplies to thousands affected by the ongoing fighting. People are trapped and desperate.”

He too said that shelling of civilians in Damascus was unacceptab­le but that the scale was “totally different.”

Russia can veto any U.N. Security Council resolution, and has frequently done so when any measure is critical of Assad.

However, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said his government could support the cease-fire resolution if it contained certain guarantees, including stopping firing into Damascus. Ironing out those details seemed to be the cause of Friday’s vote delay.

As drafted by Sweden and Kuwait, Lavrov said, the resolution does not provide “guarantees that [the rebels] will not continue shooting at Damascus residentia­l areas.”

Russia is proposing a “formula,” he said, that would “make the cease-fire real, based on the guarantees of all who are inside eastern Ghouta and outside eastern Ghouta.”

Kuwait and Sweden held out hope that agreement could be reached that would establish a cease-fire within 72 hours of passage in the Security Council.

“We are so close to adopting this resolution,” Kuwait’s ambassador to the U.N., Mansour Al-Otaibi, told reporters. “We are almost there.” Kuwait currently holds the rotating presidency of the Security Council.

The United States seems to have taken a back seat in the cease-fire efforts. State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert was asked repeatedly Thursday what steps Secretary of State Rex Tillerson was taking to urge Lavrov or other Russian officials to stop hostilitie­s. But she would not provide an answer.

“We are in Syria to fight ISIS,” she said, using an acronym for the Islamic State militant group.

Russia’s military interventi­on in the 7-year-old conflict in Syria helped give Assad the upper hand against U.S.-backed rebel groups seeking to topple him.

tracy.wilkinson @latimes.com alexandra.zavis @latimes.com Wilkinson reported from Washington and Zavis from Beirut.

 ?? Mohammed Badra EPA/Shuttersto­ck ?? A VOLUNTEER carries a boy wounded by bombing in the Syrian rebel-held enclave of eastern Ghouta.
Mohammed Badra EPA/Shuttersto­ck A VOLUNTEER carries a boy wounded by bombing in the Syrian rebel-held enclave of eastern Ghouta.

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