Russia
presented all evidence on aid convoy attack, now wants impartial
investigation – Lavrov
RT,
21
September, 2016
Moscow
has provided all the data it has on the attack on a humanitarian
convoy in Aleppo, Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov said at a UN
Security Council meeting. Lavrov also called for a full and impartial
investigation into the incident.
"There
was another unacceptable provocation on September 19 - the shelling
of a humanitarian convoy near Aleppo,”
Lavrov said.
He
also noted that at the same time militants had advanced in the 1070
district of Aleppo.
“I
am confident that such coincidences require serious analysis and an
investigation.”
On
September 19, a humanitarian convoy consisting of 31 trucks was
attacked while heading to Aleppo. According to the Red Cross, 20
civilians and one aid worker died as a result. Initial reports by the
organization claimed the convoy had been targeted by an airstrike.
On
Tuesday, the UN backtracked on its earlier claims that the convoy was
hit by military planes.
"We
are not in a position to determine whether these were in fact
airstrikes. We are in a position to say that the convoy was
attacked,"
UN humanitarian spokesman Jens Laerke said.
Speaking
on the delivery of humanitarian aid to Aleppo, Lavrov said that the
Russia and US-backed plan included the creation of a demilitarized
zone around the Castello Road.
The
minister however added that while the Syrian government forces have
started their withdrawal, the militants have not followed suit.
"The
government forces began their withdrawal – in accordance with the
Russia-US agreements – only to see that the opposition did not
follow suit, and even began to fire."
In
fact, there have been hundreds of violations by rebel groups in
Syria, including those by Ahrar al-Sham, Lavrov said. He added that
Moscow has handed over the relevant information to its American
counterparts.
"We
notified our American colleagues about 300 cases of violation of the
cessation of hostilities on the part of Ahrar al-Sham and a number of
other opposition groups whose names have been mentioned in the list
of those [groups] who joined the ceasefire,” Lavrov
said.
The
view was countered by US Secretary of State John Kerry, who put the
blame for the violations of the ceasefire on Syrian President Bashar
Assad, calling him a “spoiler.” Kerry
added that in his view, Assad “does
not believe in ceasefire.” Kerry
also urged that Syrian government forces should be banned from flying
over territories held by opposition forces.
Regarding
the attack on the humanitarian convoy near Aleppo, the US secretary
of state said that following the incident, the parties involved in
the cessation of hostilities in Syria “cannot
do business as usual.”
In
order to deliver humanitarian aid in northern Syria, all aircraft
should be grounded in the respective area, Kerry went on to say.
He
also stressed that without a proper ceasefire in Syria, the country
will witness “more
dead and more suffering on an even greater scale.” Kerry
said that the plan he and Lavrov had agreed in Geneva “is
far from perfect,” but
that as of yet there are no alternatives.
Both
Kerry and Lavrov spoke in favor of resuming talks on a Syria peace
plan.
"Attempts
by some participants [of the talks] to put forward certain
preconditions or ultimatums, to sabotage the UN Resolution 22/54, are
unacceptable," Lavrov
said.
"We
should not give in to this blackmail. The talks must be resumed
immediately," he
dded
NATO
won’t speculate on who
struck aid convoy in Syria –
Stoltenberg to RT
struck aid convoy in Syria –
Stoltenberg to RT
RT,
21
September, 2016
NATO
Secretary General Jens Stoltenberg refused to “speculate” on who
bears responsibility for the attack on the UN-Red Crescent aid convoy
near Aleppo, saying we should “get the facts” first, as he spoke
to RT after his meeting with the Russian FM.
“The
attack on the humanitarian convoy is morally totally unacceptable and
it’s a blatant violation of international law,”Stoltenberg
said in a brief interview to RT’s Ilya Petrenko, as he emerged from
the meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov on the
sidelines of the 71st UN General Assembly session in New York on
Wednesday.
However,
the NATO chief refrained from accusing any side of perpetrating the
attack.“I
will not speculate about that. It’s important to get the facts and
to find out how this could happened, but I won’t speculate,” he
said, praising the talks with Lavrov as a “frank” and “useful”
meeting.“It
just underlines importance of an effective ceasefire, unhindered
access for aid workers and, of course, lasting and sustainable
political negotiated peaceful solution to the crisis in Syria,” he
added, speaking of necessity to galvanize the stalled reconciliation
process in Syria.
Apart
from Syria, the two officials also discussed a “wide
range of issues,” including
the situation in Ukraine, air safety in the Baltic and Black Sea
regions, and agreed to “continue
our dialogue on risk reduction and military transparency.”
Earlier,
Washington claimed that Moscow should be held accountable for the
attack. Russia is “responsible
for air strikes in this space, given that their commitment under the
cessation of hostilities was to certainly ground air operations where
humanitarian assistance is flowing,” White
House Deputy National Security Advisor Ben Rhodes said.
Moscow,
however, strongly denied it had played any part in the atrocity,
while calling it “another
unacceptable provocation.”
On
Wednesday, Lavrov confirmed that Russia had provided all data related
to the incident for investigation, and pointed out that the timing of
the attack coincided with the large militant offensive in the 1070
district of Aleppo.
Lavrov
and his American counterpart, John Kerry, are expected to meet
face-to-face for the second time since the start of the UN General
Assembly session on Wednesday evening, a Russian delegation source
told RIA Novosti.
On
Monday, 20 civilians and one aid worker fell victim to the attack on
the UN-led humanitarian convoy. While initial reports suggested it
was targeted in an airstrike, no substantial evidence has been
presented to support this version so far.
The
UN later also retracted its earlier statement that the trucks and the
Red Crescent facility were hit by warplanes, saying that it is “not
in a position to determine whether there were in fact airstrikes.”
Lavrov,
Kerry clash on Aleppo aid convoy attack at UN Security Council
meeting on Syria (FULL)
CrossTalk
on Syria: CEASEFIRELESS
What
was a ray of hope has turned into a gaze into the abyss. The
Russia-U.S. ceasefire to end the Syrian conflict is in tatters. For
many the American bombing of the Syrian military marks a process of
mission creep and forced regime change.
CrossTalking with Ali Rizk, Nadim Shehadi, and Rick Sterling.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.