UN council OKs new Syria office after observers go
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Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin answers reporters' questions at the United Nations after a closed meeting of the Security Council, Thursday, Aug. 16, 2012. The Security Council will let the mandate for the U.N. military observer mission in Syria expire Sunday and will back a new civilian office there to support U.N. and Arab League efforts to end the country's 18-month conflict. Churkin said an action group will meet Friday to call for an end to the violence in Syria. (AP Photo/Richard Drew)(Credit: AP)UNITED NATIONS (AP) — The Security Council agreed Thursday to end the U.N. military observer mission in Syria in the face of an escalating civil war and back a new liaison office in Damascus to support U.N. and Arab League efforts to end the country’s 18-month conflict.
France’s U.N. Ambassador Gerard Araud, the current Security Council president, said members who have been deeply divided on tackling the conflict were united behind U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s proposal to replace the 300 unarmed observers with a small group of military advisers and political, human rights and civil affairs experts.
Araud said the council agreed that conditions set for possibly extending the observer mission — a significant reduction in violence and an end to the Syrian government’s use of heavy weapons — had not been met and the mission’s mandate would end Sunday.
The mission has been severely limited in its work by the violence in Syria, and members have been mainly confined to their hotels since June 15.
Russia’s U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin, whose country is the most important ally of Syrian President Bashar Assad, invited U.N. ambassadors from key nations and regional and international organizations who agreed in June in Geneva on guidelines for a Syrian-led political transition to a meeting Friday at U.N. headquarters in New York.
Churkin told reporters he wants the Geneva action group — along with “important actors” Iran and Saudi Arabia, who are not members — to make “a joint or parallel appeal to all the parties of the Syrian conflict that they end violence as soon as possible by a certain point in time.”
Churkin said the appeal should also urge the government and opposition to appoint representatives “to negotiate towards a political solution, and in particular towards the establishment of a transitional governing body as provided for in the Geneva document.”
In a letter to the council last Friday, Ban said the conditions for extending the observer mission had not been met, but he added that “it is imperative for the United Nations to have a presence in Syria” aside from its humanitarian operation in order to support U.N. and Arab League efforts “in mediating and facilitating a peaceful resolution to the crisis.”




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