Bashar
Assad, Iran’s red line: Velayati
A
senior aide to Iran's supreme leader warned against the overthrow of
Syria's President Bashar al-Assad, saying his fate was a "red
line", in one of the Islamic state's strongest messages of
support for the Damascus government.
20
January, 2013
Iran
has steadfastly backed Assad's rule since an uprising against his
rule began almost two years ago and regards him as an important part
of the axis of opposition against arch-foe Israel.
"If
the Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is toppled, the line of
resistance in the face of Israel will be broken," Ali Akbar
Velayati, who is seen as a potential contender in Iran's June
presidential election, said in an interview broadcast on Sunday.
"We
believe that there should be reforms emanating from the will of the
Syrian people, but without resorting to violence and obtaining
assistance from the (United States of) America," he told
Lebanon's Al-Mayadeen satellite television.
Asked
if Iran sees Assad as a red line, Velayati said: "Yes, it is so.
But this does not mean that we ignore the Syrian people's right in
choose its own rulers."
More
than 60,000 people have died in the uprising against Assad, part of
the Arab Spring protests that have swept aside four heads of state
since 2011.
Iran,
a regional Shi'ite Muslim power which backs Lebanon's Hezbollah
group, describes many Syrian opposition groups as "terrorists"
who are backed by Western and Arab states. Assad follows an offshoot
of Shi'ite Islam.
Velayati
blamed what he called "reactionary" Arab states for the
violence in Syria and singled out Qatar, accusing it of bringing in
fighters from Somalia and Afghanistan to help topple Assad.
Velayati
said all parties linked to the crisis in Syria needed to negotiate.
"Anyone
who comes to the talks cannot negotiate on the table and support the
armed elements, but must enter the negotiations and stop supporting
the armed elements," he added.
The
Islamic Republic has sought international backing for its six-point
plan to resolve the Syrian conflict. The plan calls for an immediate
end to violence and negotiations between all parties to form a
transitional government, but does not call for Assad to step down.
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