Syria
and Turkey ban flights as ties plummet
Both
countries ban civilian flights from their airspace, just days after
Turkish interception of a Syrian passenger jet.
14
October, 2012
Syria
has said Turkish civilian flights are banned from flying over its
territory after a similar move by Turkey on Syrian flights, as
relations between the former allies continue to plunge to new depths.
A
Syrian foreign ministry statement, carried by the state news agency
SANA, said the ban would take effect on Sunday.
The
decision, "in accordance with the principle of reciprocity",
was in retaliation for Turkey's move to stop Syrian civil aviation
flights over its territory, SANA said.
The
announcement came after Ahmet Davutoglu, Turkey foreign minister,
said: "Yesterday we closed our airspace to Syrian civilian
flights as we have previously done for Syrian military flights."
Ties
between Turkey and Syria took a sharp turn for the worse when they
engaged in sporadic cross-border shelling last week.
Turkey
intercepted on Wednesday a Syrian passenger jet carrying what it said
were Russian-made munitions for the Syrian army.
Syria
has denounced the interception as air piracy, while Russia said the
cargo was radar parts that complied with international law.
Turkey
has not yet announced a similar ban but said it will ground Syrian
civilian aircraft again if it suspects they are carrying military
equipment for the forces of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
Growing
tensions
Davutoglu,
held talks with Arab and European leaders in Istanbul on Saturday. He
met Guido Westerwelle, German foreign minister, before the pair met
Abdelbaset Sieda, the head of the Syrian National Council opposition
group.
"The
Syrian government is trying to export the crisis to the neighbouring
countries so that the pressure on them will lessen," Sieda said.
Davutoglu
also met Lakhdar Brahimi, the UN envoy to Syria, and Nabil Elaraby,
the Arab League chief.
Brahimi
was in Iranian capital, Tehran, on Sunday for talks with Ali Akbar
Salehi, Iran's foreign minister, who handed him a proposal aimed at
ending the conflict.
Salehi
said Iran had "handed its unofficial detailed proposal in
writing aimed at solving the Syrian crisis" to Brahimi as well
as Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Turkey, in comments broadcast on
Arabic-language al-Alam television.
He
did not go into details about the proposals, only adding Tehran would
support efforts by the international envoy.
Brahimi
welcomed the Iranian initiative and is due to meet Saeed Jalili,
Iran's top security official, on Monday before leaving for Baghdad
later that day, the website of state television reported.
Brahimi
is on a regional tour aimed at finding a solution to the conflict in
Syria after Damascus rejected a UN call to implement a unilateral
ceasefire.
At
a joint news conference with Westerwelle on Saturday, Davutoglu said
Turkey was prepared to use force again if it was attacked, just as it
did last week when a shell fired across the border from Syria killed
five Turkish villagers.
SANA
reported that Syrian government officials and Russia's ambassador in
Damascus discussed ways to establish a joint Syrian-Turkish security
committee that would "control the security situation on both
sides of the border in the framework of respecting the national
sovereignty of the two countries".
Turkey
has made no comment on the proposal, and it is unclear whether Russia
has presented it to the Turkish government yet.
Sieda
said that "instead of suggesting a dialogue between Turkey and
Syria, Russia should pressure the Assad regime they have been
supporting and prevent them from massacring its own people as well as
ceasing arms shipment to Syria".
Rallies
in Lebanon
In
another Syria-related development, hundreds of people took to the
streets of Beirut in neighbouring Lebanon on Sunday for two separate
rallies, one expressing support for the Assad regime and the other
calling for its downfall.
Demonstrators
held posters bearing slogans including "Thank you Russia!"
and "Lebanon forever with Assad's Syria," and also chanted
slogans against Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which support the revolt
against the regime.
They
also waved flags of Syria, Iran and the Lebanese group Hezbollah,
which supports Assad.
Since
the anti-regime uprising broke out in Syria in March last year,
Russia and China have vetoed three draft UN Security Council
resolutions aimed at pressuring Assad's regime.
Later,
in the heart of Beirut, hundreds of supporters of a radical Sunni
Muslim leader, Sheikh Ahmed al-Assir, gathered for a protest held for
"our brothers in Syria".
The
participants waved Syrian independence flags in support for the
ongoing revolt.
Syria
dominated Lebanon politically and militarily for three decades, and
the small Mediterranean country is deeply divided over the conflict
in its neighbour.

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