World powers worry Syria sliding to civil war
With a stalemate over proposed sanctions, the situation in Syria could easily become a civil war
Topics: From the Wires, Syria, News, Politics News
A Syrian man Nidal Kodssi, 27, who was wounded in his legs after the Syrian forces shelled his house and killed his wife and his eight month son at Baba Amr in Homs Province in February, is being treated by a Lebanese nurse at a hospital, in the northern port city of Tripoli, Lebanon, Wednesday May 30, 2012. Since the uprising against President Bashar Assad's regime began in March 2011, thousands of Syrian refugees who fled the violence in their country now live in Lebanon, and many wounded Syrians are smuggled across the border for treatment in Lebanese hospitals, mostly in the northern city of Tripoli which is largely sympathetic to the Syrian uprising. But Lebanon is sharply divided by the Syrian conflict, and even in hospitals, Syrian opposition activists are fearful of retaliation. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)(Credit: AP)GENEVA (AP) — World powers share a belief that Syria could descend into civil war and plan to map out possible ways to avoid such a disaster for the region, a deputy to international envoy Kofi Annan said Wednesday.
Jean-Marie Guehenno told reporters after privately briefing the U.N. Security Council, the world body’s most powerful unit, that diplomats are deeply troubled by Syria<s cycle of violence.
“I believe that in the council there’s an understanding that any sliding toward full-scale civil war in Syria would be catastrophic, and the Security Council now needs to have that kind of strategic discussion on how that needs to be avoided,” Guehenno said in Geneva after speaking to the New York-based Security Council by videoconference.
However, there was no indication that Russia, one of the veto-wielding permanent members of the Security Council, was changing its position on Syria.
Dmitry Peskov, President Vladimir Putin’s spokesman, was quoted as saying by the ITAR-Tass news agency Wednesday that “there can be no talk” about a shift in Russia’s stance on Syria under foreign pressure.
Russia, along with China, has twice shielded Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime from the U.N. sanctions over his crackdown on protests. Syria is Russia’s last ally in the region, providing Moscow with its only naval base outside the former Soviet Union and a top customer for Russian weapons industries.
Guehenno, the Annan deputy and a former U.N. peacekeeping chief, also warned of the possibility of outside groups and terrorists taking advantage of the violence. “In any situation where there is a risk of civil war you have opportunistic actors, if one can say that, that can try to exploit that,” he said.
Guehenno said he told the closed session of the 15-nation council that Annan’s six-point peace plan to end the 15-month conflict must be fully implemented and that political process must include talks between the Syrian government and the opposition.
“It<s very important that the Security Council be united in pushing for a political process,” Guehenno said.
Annan held talks with Assad in Damascus on Tuesday following the weekend massacre in Houla of more than 100 people, many of them women and children.
At the U.N. headquarters in New York, Germany’s U.N. Ambassador Peter Wittig said Guehenno told the council that while Annan was in Damascus he appealed to the Assad<s government “to take bold steps forward” to end the violence immediately and implement the peace plan.




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