RABAT, Morocco - The Arab League confirmed the suspension of Syria from
the organization on Wednesday and gave its government three days to halt
the violence and accept an observer mission or face economic sanctions.
The suspension - first announced by the Arab League on Saturday
and confirmed during the meeting - is a surprisingly harsh and highly
unusual move for a member of Syria's standing.
Qatari Foreign
Minister Hamad bin Jassim told reporters following the daylong meeting
in Rabat, Morocco, that Syria is being offered the chance to end the
violence against civilians and implement a peace plan that the Arab
League outlined on Nov. 2. The U.N. estimates that more than 3,500
people have been killed in Syria's 8-month-old uprising.
"The
Syrian government has to sign the protocol sent by the Arab League and
end all violence against demonstrators," he said, adding that it has
three days. "Economic sanctions are certainly possible, if the Syrian
government does not respond. But we are conscious that such sanctions
would touch the Syrian people."
The protocol calls for an
observer mission of 30-50 members under the auspices of the Arab League
to ensure that Syria is following the Arab plan, calling for the regime
to halt its attacks on protesters, pull tanks and armoured vehicles out
of cities, release political prisoners, and allow journalists and rights
groups into the country.
The protocol did not specifically say
if Syria's suspension from the organization has remained in force, but
an official from the Moroccan Foreign Ministry confirmed that is the
case. He spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized
to talk with the media.
The Arab League also demanded the withdrawal of Syria's representative to the organization.
"In
the light of insulting and undiplomatic words of the permanent Syrian
representative, the Arab League is asking the Syrian government to
withdraw its representative," said the League statement, without
identifying the behaviour in question.
The Arab League has
rarely taken decisive actions to deal with crises in the Arab world out
of reluctance to criticize fellow governments. But in this case, several
members have described their forceful engagement in the Syrian
situation as a way of staving off the kind of foreign intervention that
took place in Libya earlier this year. NATO's bombing campaign against
Libya took place less than a month after it was suspended by the Arab
League on Feb. 22.
"Arab leaders don't have a legacy of
commenting and interfering in domestic events in Arab countries, so now
this is a turning point for the Arab League," said Gamal Abdel Gawad, a
Cairo-based commentator on Arab affairs.
"Arab governments are
being exposed to pressure from their public, from the Syrian people and
on the international level, so the Arab League has to do something -
they can't keep staying on the sidelines," he added.
Even Turkey, which once had close ties with Syria, has expressed increasing concern over the situation across the border.
"We
denounce the mass murder of the Syrian people," said Turkish Foreign
Minister Ahmet Davutoglu, who was in Morocco for a meeting on
Arab-Turkish ties. "It is all of our responsibility to end the bloodshed
in Syria."
Bin Jassim of Qatar declined to give any details
about possible economic sanctions against Syria, if it refuses the
observer mission. But the Arab news channel al-Arabiya suggested they
would likely take place in co-ordination with Turkey and include the
energy sector.
Its suspension from the Arab League has enraged
Syria, which considers itself a bastion of Arab nationalism. Syrian
Foreign Minister Walid al-Mouallem boycotted Wednesday's meeting.
The
threat of Arab sanctions comes on top of rising threats of sanctions
from European countries and the United States as well leaving Syria even
more isolated.
Arab League Secretary General Nabil al-Araby
confirmed that the organization has been in touch with the Syrian
opposition and said it has identified 16 regions in particular that
needed to be monitored.
"We have spoken with the Syrian opposition on all topics, but they never requested weapons," he added.
Qatar,
which chairs the Arab League committee on the Syrian situation, has
been particularly forceful on resolving the situation and bin Jassim
expressed a degree of impatience about the continuing bloodshed and
violence in the country.
"We want solutions, not (more) speeches. The killing must be stopped," he said.
Source: Global News
Posted by BUI NGOC TU - IAMES