Vancouver Sun

UN truce plan near collapse, Annan admits

Comments come after another large massacre of civilians is revealed

- BY PATRICK J. MCDONNELL

BEIRUT — In his gloomiest assessment to date, United Nations special envoy Kofi Annan acknowledg­ed Thursday that his six- point peace plan was not working and warned that Syria was headed down a path of “brutal repression, massacres, sectarian violence and even all- out civil war.”

He and other officials condemned a massacre of dozens of civilians near the central city of Hama. Diplomats proposed crafting a new strategy to bring peace to Syria that would engage other Middle East countries, including Iran.

Addressing the UN General Assembly in New York, Annan urged world leaders to make it clear that failing to comply with the plan would carry consequenc­es, presumably for Syrian President Bashar Assad, whose government, Annan said, bore the “first responsibi­lity” for ending the violence.

“We cannot allow mass killing to become part of everyday reality in Syria,” Annan said. “The crisis is escalating. The violence is getting worse. The abuses are continuing. The country is becoming more polarized and more radicalize­d. And Syria’s immediate neighbours are increasing­ly worried about the threat of spillover.”

Annan spoke dejectedly of the prospects for his plan resulting in a negotiated settlement of the conflict and alluded to the need to consider other actions “if the plan is not working, or if we decide it’s not the way to go.”

Annan made it clear that divisions persist among key Security Council members on the scope of actions that should be considered, and he called for unity on the idea of including all regional forces with influence on either the Assad regime or the rebel groups fighting him.

It remained unclear how new intermedia­ries would succeed where Annan’s plan failed. The proposed “contact group” would still be deeply divided between the U. S. and European nations urging bolder interventi­on and sanctions on Damascus, and Russia and China, which would presumably be backed by newcomer Iran in their steadfast rejection of such measures.

U. S. and British officials have balked at including Iran, a staunch ally of Assad and the regional nemesis of the West. But Russia has backed the idea

The crisis is escalating. The violence is getting worse. The abuses are continuing. The country is becoming more polarized and more radicalize­d.

KOFI ANNAN UN SPECIAL ENVOY TO SYRIA

of an expanded meeting of nations that have influence with various factions in the 15- month- old uprising.

At the General Assembly on Thursday, Russia and China reiterated their support for the Annan peace plan but also reaffirmed their opposition to any solution involving military interventi­on in Syria or forced “regime change.”

The United States and its allies, meanwhile, say Assad’s departure is a necessary outcome of any peace plan. The Obama administra­tion is trying to persuade Russia to agree to a plan similar to what happened in Yemen, where President Ali Abdullah Saleh was eased out of power and replaced by his former deputy after a year of protests.

Annan’s comments in New York came as word of a second large- scale massacre in two weeks emerged from near Hama. Opposition activists alleged that government shelling and pro- government thugs had killed as many as 78 people.

Syrian state television said “terrorists” — as the government refers to armed rebels seeking to overthrow Assad — had committed a “horrific crime” in the Hama region. Security forces had tracked down the perpetrato­rs and killed them, state TV reported.

UN observers, whose presence has helped confirm several other recent massacres, said they were prevented from arriving at the scene by military personnel and civilians. The monitors came under fire but no one was hurt, the UN said.

“Each day seems to bring new additions to the grim catalogue of atrocities,” said UN Secretary- General Ban Ki- moon. He accused Assad of tolerating the killing of innocents, saying he has “lost all legitimacy” as a leader.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada