UK
says no evidence Syrian rebels used chemical weapons despite UN probe
UK
PM David Cameron claims there is no evidence the Syrian opposition
used chemical weapons. This comes after a UN representative voiced
‘concrete suspicions' that the rebels used nerve gas, even as the
world powers were trying to resolve the conflict.
In
this image made available by the Syrian News Agency on March 19,
2013, medics and other masked people attend to a man at a hospital in
Khan al-Assal in the northern Aleppo province, as Syria's government
accused rebel forces of using chemical weapons for the first time.
(AFP Photo / SANA)
RT,
9 May, 2013
"Our
assessment is that chemical weapons use in Syria is very likely to
have been initiated by the regime. We have no evidence to date of
opposition use,” Cameron said on the eve of his trip to
the Russian city of Sochi for talks with President Vladimir Putin.
Syria is expected to be at the forefront of the meeting.
The statement by the
British Prime Minister comes shortly after a United Nations inquiry
into human rights abuses in Syria found evidence that the opposition
forces may have used
chemical weapons.
Investigators spoke with the victims of the ongoing bloody conflict
and gathered medical testimonies which indicated that Syrians rebels
used sarin nerve agent.
“There are strong,
concrete suspicions but not yet incontrovertible proof of the use of
sarin gas, from the way the victims were treated,” Carla
Del Ponte, a leading member of the UN Independent Commission of
Inquiry on Syria, told Swiss TV.
London, along with Paris,
have also been pushing to ease EU ban on weapons supplies to Syria.
Earlier in May, the UK sent a draft proposal to EU diplomats lift
the arms embargo on
Syria so that weapons could be sent to the rebels.
Citing the “rapidly
deteriorating” situation in the country, the six-page document
calls for the Syrian opposition to be exempt from the arms embargo
and for the phrase “non-lethal aid” to be removed from the
wording of the sanctions currently in place.
But with Moscow and
Washington having recently agreed to join efforts in a bid to mediate
peace in Syria, London is now hard-pressed to reconsider its support
for the Syrian insurgency, according to RT contributor Afshin
Rattansi.
“The fact that David
Cameron can do this shows he is completely out of step - after all,
it was he who has been trying to lift the arms embargo for the
rebels,” Rattansi said. “The very rebels that
are being sent this so-called non-lethal force, and equipment, and
materiel, they are defecting to al-Nusra, according to a report in
British papers. If Britain has been exporting, say, night-vision
goggles to the Syrian rebels and they used them in a sarin gas
attack, as indicated by Carla Del Ponte’s UN report, does that mean
Britain has been backing chemical weapons use in the Middle East?”
Moscow warned against
lifting the EU embargo as
it would be a violation of the international law and expressed hope
that ‘reasonable’ European states would prevent such a step.
“Arming
non-governmental players violates international law,” Russia’s
Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said last week. “It's not
the time to pour oil on the fire of the Syrian conflict. For all
outside players it’s time to push all parties.”
Russia has been pushing
for all sides of the ongoing Syrian conflict – the government and
the opposing groups - to come to the negotiating table. Moscow has
criticized some international players for providing support and
arming the rebel forces.
Kerry: ‘Assad won’t be part of Syria transitional government’
Despite the US now
pushing with Russia for an international conference to be called on
Syria, US Secretary of State John Kerry said once again that Syrian
President Bashar Assad cannot be part of the transitional process.
“The foreign
minister will work with us, as they have, to try to bring all the
parties to the table so that we can effect a transition government by
mutual consent of both sides,” Kerry told reporters during
his visit to Rome on Thursday.
“President Assad
will not be a component of that transitional government,” he
added.
Kerry also revealed that
another $100 million in aid will be supplied for the tens of
thousands of Syrian refugees who have fled the country since the
uprising against Assad began.
The statements came after
Kerry’s trip to Moscow where he discussed the Syrian issue with his
Russian counterpart Lavrov. The US and Russia have been at odds over
the fate of Assad: while Washington insists he must step down, Moscow
maintains that only the Syrian people should decide on the matter.
The two powers failed to
iron out this difference in approach during the Moscow talks.
However, both reiterated their commitment to the Syria peace plan –
known as the
Geneva Communiqué –
agreed by the Action Group for Syria in June 2012 and called for a
follow-up meeting on the conference by
the end of May.
The Syrian conflict has
shown no signs of relenting, despite the efforts of the international
community. According to UN estimates, over 70,000 Syrians have been
killed since the unrest began over two years ago.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.