UNITED NATIONS: UN-Arab League mediator Lakhdar Brahimi warned the UN Security Council on Tuesday that Syrian President Bashar Assad may be able to cling to power for now but the country is “breaking up before everyone’s eyes,” diplomats told Reuters.
Brahimi appealed to the 15-nation council to overcome its deadlock and take action to help put an end to the Syrian civil war. However, it was not clear whether his latest report — one of his bleakest since his appointment last year — would persuade Russia to agree to support concrete UN steps to try to halt the bloodshed.
Brahimi suggested that attempts to end the 22-month-old conflict that has claimed over 60,000 lives, according to UN figures, had not progressed in the last two months. He said it was up to the Security Council to end its impasse.
“The country is breaking up before everyone’s eyes,” Brahimi was quoted as saying by diplomats inside the closed-door meeting. “Only the international community can help and first (and) foremost the Security Council.”
He said the principles of a political transition in Syria, agreed to at talks among major world and regional powers in Geneva in June last year, could form the basis for a Security Council plan of action.
“In the Geneva communique the meaning of full executive powers (for a transitional government) must be clarified, but it clearly means that Assad should have no role in the transition,” one diplomat quoted Brahimi as saying.
The mediator told the council that Assad may be able to hold onto power for the time being, but that “the Syrian regime’s legitimacy has been seriously, probably irreparably, damaged.”
Russia has said that insisting on Assad’s departure as a condition for peace negotiations between the government and the opposition forces would prevent such talks from ever taking place. The opposition, backed by the United States and much of Europe, has made plain that Assad can play no role in a future Syrian government.
The UN Security Council has been deadlocked since 2011 over Russia and China’s refusal to consider sanctions against Assad’s government. They have vetoed three resolutions condemning Assad’s attempts to crush what began as peaceful protests inspired by other Arab Spring uprisings.
Moscow has joined the Damascus government in accusing the United States, France, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey of supporting the Syrian rebels.
'Unprecedented levels of horror'
Brahimi will attend a dinner with the ambassadors of the five permanent Security Council members — the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France — later on Tuesday to discuss ways to end the deadlock, diplomats said.
Western diplomats said Russia is more concerned with countering US influence in the Middle East and maintaining some level of Russian leverage in the region than it is with protecting Assad.
Brahimi said “unprecedented levels of horror” have been reached in Syria, and that both the government and the opposition forces have committed atrocious crimes.
Highlighting his point about atrocities, opposition activists said at least 65 people had been found shot dead with their hands bound in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo on Tuesday in what they called a “new massacre.”
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Diplomats said Brahimi has grown extremely frustrated at the inability of the Security Council to unite behind him. His predecessor, former UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, voiced similar frustration when he resigned in August.
British Ambassador to the United Nations Mark Lyall Grant told reporters that he hoped the council could finally overcome its deadlock.
“It is horrendous that the brutality of the regime goes on, the number of deaths is increasing the whole time, and the Security Council is still not able to put its full weight behind the UN special envoy’s efforts,” he said.
“It’s a question now of recognizing what needs to be done to put an end to the bloodshed and to start a legitimate political transition that has some chance of meeting the aspirations of the Syrian people.”
The United Nations is not present in all parts of Syria but it is maintaining limited aid operations. It has warned, however, that it needs more money and better access on the ground. Even so, it is in position to gauge the levels of violence and the worsening humanitarian crisis inside Syria.
Last week a senior UN humanitarian affairs official said after returning from a four-day visit Syria that the country was being “systematically destroyed by its own people on all sides.”
Brahimi told Security Council members that the regional outlook was also worrying.
“Syrian factions are getting cross-border support from neighboring countries,” a diplomat quoted Brahimi as saying. “Syria is becoming a playground for competing forces. None of the neighbors is immune to the fallout consequences of the conflict.”