EU landen steunen VN vredesmissie in Syrië (en)

Met dank overgenomen van EUobserver (EUOBSERVER) i, gepubliceerd op maandag 13 februari 2012, 20:11.

BRUSSELS - Libya-type military strikes in Syria are still "out of the question," but France, Italy and the UK have backed a call to send in UN peacekeepers.

The three countries spoke out on Monday (13 February) in reaction to an appeal for UN intervention by the Arab League.

The league at its meeting in Cairo on Sunday called for the UN Security Council (UNSC) to send in UN-hatted soldiers. Its resolution also pledged to give "all forms of political and material support" to the Syrian opposition - a clause widely understood to mean arms shipments.

Details of the initiative are to emerge at the first meeting of the Friends of Syria group in Tunisia on 24 February - a contact group involving several EU countries and EU officials similar to a group on Libya last year.

But Italian foreign minister Giulio Terzi immediately welcomed the Arab ideas in a written communique, saying "there is a full convergence of views between Italy and the Arab League."

French foreign minister Alain Juppe told AFP that France, which already has a large contingent in a UN mission in neighbouring Lebanon, might contribute to a Syria peacekeeping force if it is authorised by the UNSC.

British foreign minister William Hague, while on a visit to South Africa, indicated the UK would not take part but might give money or logistical support: "I don't see the way forward in Syria as being Western boots on the ground, in any form, including in peacekeeping form. I think they would need to come from other countries, rather than Western nations ... But of course if such a concept could be made viable we will be supporting it in all the usual ways."

Speaking for the EU as a whole, foreign relations chief Catherine Ashton said she backs "a stronger Arab presence on the ground in co-operation with the UN." Her spokesman, Michael Mann, told EUobserver that arming rebels is "certainly not something that the European Union is engaged in," however.

Syria itself is staunchly opposed to the Arab plan.

Its UN ambassador, Bashar Ja'afari, at a meeting of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva on Monday said the opposition is working with Al-Qaeda and called the Arab text "an incitement to terrorism."

But the country's biggest ally in the UN - Russia - was less categorical.

Russia just last week vetoed and EU-and-Arab-League-backed UN resolution on stopping violence in Syria. But on Monday its foreign minister at a meeting in Moscow with his counterpart from the United Arab Emirates - one of Syria's biggest enemies - said it is seeking "further clarifcation" of the new Arab League plan.

He added that in order to send in peacekeepers, there must first be a ceasefire, "but the tragedy is that the armed groups that are confronting the forces of the regime are not subordinate to anyone and are not under control."

Meanwhile, the UNHCR meeting in Geneva saw UN human rights chief Navi Pillay read out a litany of horrors taking place on the other side of the Mediterranean.

She cited "systematic" use of torture, including on hospital patients, forced disappearances, children killed by sniper fire and rape of male children while in detention as examples. "I am very distressed that the ruthless stirring of sectarian tensions might soon plunge Syria into civil war," she said.


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