Arab News

Assad rules out security cooperatio­n with the West

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DAMASCUS: Syrian President Bashar Assad on Sunday refused any security cooperatio­n with Western nations or the reopening of their embassies until they cut ties with opposition and insurgent groups.

Shortly after Assad gave his speech, a shell hit the first internatio­nal fair in the country since the war began six years ago, killing and wounding several people.

Assad’s defiant comments come at a time when his troops and pro-Iranian militiamen are gaining ground across the country under the cover of Russian airstrikes. Many countries have ceased calling for him to step down.

Speaking before dozens of Syrian diplomats in Damascus, Assad praised Russia, Iran, China and Lebanon’s Hezbollah for supporting his government during the conflict.

He said Syria will look east when it comes to political, economic and cultural relations.

“Let’s be clear. There will be no security cooperatio­n nor opening of embassies or even a role for some countries that say that they want to play a role in ending the crisis in Syria before they clearly and frankly cut their relations with terrorism,” Assad said. “At that point maybe we can speak about opening embassies.”

Following months of steady military advances, the Syrian regime has sought to portray itself as the victor in a war that is winding down, and is looking ahead to reconstruc­tion.

Assad said his country’s economy is turning to growth again “at a very slow pace, although we are under an almost complete embargo.”

The regime had billed the internatio­nal trade fair, which opened three days ago, as a “victory” and a sign of renewed confidence in the war-torn nation.

The Mortar News in Damascus Facebook page, which tracks violence in the capital, said the shell hit the entrance of the fair, killing four people and wounding four others.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, an opposition-run group that reports on both sides of the conflict, said the shell killed five people and wounded 11 but did not say who was behind the attack.

The state-run news agency said the shelling inflicted casualties but gave no further details. It blamed the opposition forces in the suburbs of the capital, saying they fired the shell in violation of a truce reached earlier this month in the eastern suburbs of Damascus known as eastern Ghouta.

The Syrian crisis began in March 2011 with a peaceful uprising against Assad’s government, later escalating into a fullfledge­d civil war after a brutal regime crackdown and the rise of an armed insurgency. The conflict has since killed an estimated 400,000 people and displaced half the country’s population.

In the early years of the conflict, many Western and Arab countries called on Assad to step down, and both the US and the EU have imposed sanctions on the Syrian regime. Several Arab and Western countries also withdrew their diplomats from Damascus.

But after Daesh declared a caliphate in large parts of Syria and Iraq, the internatio­nal focus turned to crushing the extremists, who have planned attacks around the world that killed and wounded hundreds of people.

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