UN
sending non-essential
international
staff out of
Syria
Syrian
men inspect the scene of a car bomb explosion in Jaramana, a mainly
Christian and Druze suburb of Damascus, on November 28, 2012. At
least two car bombs exploded in Damascus killing and injureing a
numbe of people.(AFP Photo / STR)
RT,
2
December, 2012
The
UN says it is sending “all non-essential international staff out of
Syria” and halting aid missions outside Damascus. The organization
is restricting travels for remaining employees.
A
quarter of the 100 international staff in Damascus could leave this
week. Some staff could be moved out of the northern city of Aleppo.
Travel outside the capital will be restricted, UN humanitarian
officials said, as quoted by IRIN agency.
Officials
say the move is necessary because the situation in Syria has
deteriorated.
Regional
humanitarian coordinator for the UN, Radhouane Nouicer, said that
security needed to be reassessed because of violations to
international humanitarian law.
"The
security situation has become extremely difficult, including in
Damascus," he
said.
“For
as long as international humanitarian law is not fully observed by
all parties to this conflict and for as long as the safety of
humanitarian workers is not strictly secured, UN agencies have to
review the size of the their presence in the country as well as the
way they deliver humanitarian aid,” he
continued.
Damascus
has largely remained safe since the Syrian conflict began. However,
the city's main
airport was closed last
week after several attacks by rebels.
“The
situation is significantly changing…there is an increased risk for
humanitarians as a result of indiscriminate shooting or clashes
between the parties,” UN
chief security advisor in Syria, Sabir Mughal, said.
Top
UN security adviser Sabir Mughal said humanitarian workers are at
serious risk in Syria.
Eight
UN staff have been killed since the beginning of the 20-month
uprising against President Bashar Assad.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin says that Moscow shares
international concern over
the humanitarian situation in Syria. The leader met with Turkish
Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan in Istanbul on Monday.
"We
hope clashes and bloodshed in Syria would end immediately," Erdogon
said in a statement. He added that the foreign ministries of Turkey
and Russia were taking further steps regarding the Syrian conflict.
Also
on Monday, an EgyptAir flight from Cairo to Damascus turned back
because of a "bad
security situation" at
the Damascus airport, an EgyptAir official said.
EgyptAir
flights resumed on Monday. The company canceled all flights due to
"security reasons" on Friday, leading to a three day
grounding.
Lebanese
troops exchange fire with Syrian rebels
Lebanon's
state-run National News Agency said late Sunday that Lebanese
soldiers stationed near the village of Qaa in the Bekaa Valley
returned fire into Syria after 'armed men' shot at them from across
the frontier.
3
December, 2012
Lebanon's
state news agency says Lebanese soldiers have exchanged fire across
the border with rebels in neighboring Syria.
The
state-run National News Agency said late Sunday that Lebanese
soldiers stationed near the village of Qaa in the Bekaa Valley
returned fire into Syria after "armed men" shot at them
from across the frontier.
The
agency quoted a statement from the Lebanese army that said the
exchange of fire took place Saturday and that there were no
casualties.
Since
it began in March 2011, Syria's civil war on several occasions has
spilled into neighboring countries, including Turkey, Israel and
Lebanon, raising fears that the Arab Spring's longest and deadliest
revolt against the authoritarian regime in Damascus could spark a
regional war.
Russia,
Turkey agree to differ over Syria conflict
Russia
and Turkey agreed to differ on Monday on strategies to end Syria's
civil war, highlighting how distant the prospects of a negotiated
solution to the 20-month-old conflict are.
3
December, 2012
Russian President
Vladimir Putin held talks with Turkish Prime Minister Tayyip Erdogan
during a one-day visit to Istanbul aimed partly at ensuring
differences over Syria do not damage a deepening trade and energy
relationship.
"The
positions of the Russian Federation and Turkey completely correspond
regarding what has to be attained (in Syria), but as of yet no shared
approach regarding methods of how to attain it has been reached,"
Putin told a joint news conference with Erdogan after the talks.
Turkey
- worried about Syria's chemical weapons, a growing refugee crisis,
and Syrian support for Kurdish militants - has been a major backer of
the Syrian opposition and has led calls for international action
against President Bashar al-Assad.
It
sees Russia, one of Syria's closest allies, as key to quelling a
conflict that has sent over a hundred thousand refugees fleeing to
Turkish soil and stirred warnings of a sectarian war beyond Syria's
borders.
"Our
biggest wish is an immediate halt to the bloodshed and fighting in
Syria, and we are taking steps to make sure our foreign ministers are
carrying out extensive work with this aim," Erdogan told the
news conference.
But
Moscow has vetoed three U.N. Security Council resolutions aimed at
putting pressure on the Syrian leader, blocking Turkish, Western and
Arab efforts to provide U.N. support for the rebel forces trying to
topple him.
As
Syria's new opposition coalition consolidates, Russia has stepped up
efforts to tell the world it is not on Assad's side, part of a bid to
cast itself as a neutral player with an interest in peace alone. But
it has shown no signs of shifting to join Western rivals in backing
the rebels.
Turkish
officials say Russia must be assured it does not stand to lose from
the departure of Assad, who has been Moscow's chief Middle Eastern
ally. Syria has been a major client for Russian arms and hosts a
naval maintenance facility that is Russia's only military base
outside the former Soviet Union.
Both
sides have been careful to ensure their differences over Syria do not
undermine a broader relationship governed by trade, Turkey's need for
energy supplies and mutual security interests across an array of
regional hotspots.
"Turkish-Russian
relations have made significant progress in the last 10 years,"
Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said in a television
interview ahead of Putin's visit.
"Nobody
should dwell on a scenario in which tensions emerge between Turkey
and Russia over Syria."
Russia
provides nearly two thirds of Turkey's gas supplies and often ramps
up its exports to the country during frequent cuts in Iranian gas
supplies in the winter.
Erdogan
said Turkey would continue to buy natural gas from Iran despite the
prospect of tighter U.S. sanctions aimed at ratcheting up economic
pressure on Tehran over its disputed nuclear programme.
Russian
Energy Minister Alexander Novak, who was also in Istanbul, said on
Sunday Russia was willing to increase gas supplies to Turkey -
Gazprom's second-largest natural gas consumer after Germany - this
winter if requested.
Turkish
energy officials said Ankara, which usually buys around 30 billion
cubic metres (bcm) of gas from Russia each year, had requested an
additional 3 bcm from Gazprom ahead of an anticipated rise in energy
demand in the winter months.
Gazprom
clinched a long-term deal to export natural gas to private companies
in Turkey last month, securing a growing market for the Russian gas
export monopoly as it faces declines from its core consumers in the
European Union.
The
move followed a one-year impasse in gas trade between Gazprom and
Turkish firms after state pipeline company Botas did not renew an
expiring 25-year contract at the end of 2011 due to a pricing
dispute. Business has continued in the meantime only on a short-term
basis.
State-controlled
Russian energy group InterRao meanwhile said it had reached a
tentative agreement to complete the purchase of a power station in
Turkey this year by buying the Turkish subsidiary of U.S. firm AEI.
Sources
familiar with the matter say the deal had been held up for months
amid tensions between Moscow and Ankara with Turkish government
approval the last major hurdle.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.