Arab League head warns of possible civil war in Syria
An Algerian former monitor said several monitors had left Syria or might do so soon because the mission had failed to halt President Bashar al-Assad’s violent crackdown on a popular revolt against his rule.
"Yes I fear a civil war and the events that we see and hear about now could lead to a civil war," said Elaraby, whose body deployed the monitors on December 26 to check whether Syria was respecting an Arab peace plan.
"Any problems in Syria will have consequences for the neighboring states," he said in an interview with the Egyptian Al-Hayat television channel.
He described reports from the mission head as "worrying," but said there was "no doubt that the pace of killing has fallen with the presence of the observers."
Syrian opposition groups say the monitors, due to present their findings to the Arab League’s foreign ministers on January 19-20, have only bought Assad more time to crush protests that erupted in March, inspired by Arab uprisings elsewhere.
"(The ministers) will decide whether there is any benefit in continuing or not," said Elaraby.
The monitors resumed work on Thursday, a League official said, for the first time since 11 were injured by pro-Assad demonstrators in the port of Latakia three days previously, an attack that also sidelined plans to expand the team.
SHARED CHAGRIN
Anwar Malek, an Algerian who quit the monitoring team this week, said many of his former colleagues shared his chagrin.
"I cannot specify a number, but many. When you talk to them their anger is clear," he told Reuters by telephone, adding that many could not leave because of orders from their governments.
He said a Moroccan legal specialist, an aid worker from Djibouti and an Egyptian had also left the mission.
Their departures could not immediately be confirmed. But another monitor, who asked not to be named, told Reuters he planned to leave Syria on Friday. "The mission does not serve the citizens," he said. "It doesn’t serve anything."
The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least 21 people were killed across the country on Thursday. Seven died in the eastern city of Deir al-Zor when security forces opened fire and the bodies of seven security force members were delivered to a hospital in the town of Maarat al-Noman, apparently killed in clashes with army deserters.
The Arab League is divided over Syria, with Qatar its most vocal critic and Algeria defending steps taken by Damascus.
The mission, the first of its kind the League has mounted, is led by Sudanese General Mohammed al-Dabi, who has come under fire from rights groups over his role in the Darfur conflict.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, speaking after talks in Washington with Algerian Foreign Minister Mourad Medelci, stressed "the need to end the Assad government’s assault on its own people."
Medelci, who had earlier said that the Assad government had taken steps to defuse the crisis, said he and Clinton had a "concurrence of views."
BLOODY HANDLING
Assad, breaking a six-month public silence on Tuesday, disparaged the Arab League, which suspended Syria in November over its bloody handling of the unrest. He blamed the upheaval on "terrorists" whom he would punish with an iron fist.
The conflict in Syria, in which insurgents have joined what began as a mostly peaceful movement to end 41 years of Assad family rule, has killed more than 5,000 people, by a U.N. tally. The government says 2,000 soldiers and police have been killed.
A French journalist, Gilles Jacquier, was among nine people killed in the rebellious city of Homs on Wednesday in what the state news agency SANA said was a mortar attack by "terrorists."
Jacquier, the first Western reporter killed in Syria in 10 months of unrest, was in a government-escorted media group visiting a pro-Assad neighborhood of the divided city, which has been racked by protests, crackdowns and sectarian violence.
As with three deadly explosions in Damascus in the past few weeks, Assad’s critics have suggested the authorities staged the Homs attack to reinforce their argument that Syria is facing foreign-backed militants, not a broad pro-democracy revolt.
"This killing is indicative of the transition of the Syrian regime from preventing press from freely working and covering the events in Syria to killing journalists and media personnel, in an attempt to silence neutral and independent media sources," the opposition Syrian National Council said in a statement.
Syrian border guards turned away a protest convoy of about 150 Syrian expatriates from Europe, North America and the Arab world on Thursday who were trying to enter the country to draw attention to civilians caught up in the unrest.
Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani, who heads the Arab League committee on Syria, said doubts were growing about the effectiveness of the monitors.
"I could not see up until now a successful mission, frankly speaking," he told a joint news conference with Clinton in Washington. "We hope we solve it, as we say, in the house of the Arabs, but right now the Syrian government is not helping us."
Any admission that the monitoring mission has failed will pile pressure on the Arab League to refer Syria to the U.N. Security Council, although a Western diplomat there said Algeria, Iraq and Egypt were likely to oppose such a step.
Western powers say Russia, a long-standing ally of Damascus, has blocked any tough moves by the council against Damascus and only a direct appeal by the League could shift Moscow’s view.
Asia
Qatari diplomat notes progress at US-Iranian indirect talks in Doha
Israel strikes Gaza to kill Hamas's military wing platoon commander
Ukrainian drone carrying explosives crashes on Türkiye’s Black Sea coast
Iran warns of immediate response to any threat, cites US commitment to restrain Israel
NEWS FEED
Brent falls below $71 per barrel, first time since February 27
Russian forces attacking Kyiv with drones, air raid alert in effect
Belgium beat Senegal 3-2 to reach World Cup last 16
Trump believes Cuba is "moving toward" the United States
Qatari diplomat notes progress at US-Iranian indirect talks in Doha
Rutte says White House is disappointed with European allies over Iran
President Ilham Aliyev and President of the European Commission delivered press statements - UPDATED-1
President Ilham Aliyev held expanded meeting with President of the European Commission-UPDATED
President Ilham Aliyev’s social media accounts shared video on Ursula von der Leyen’s visit to Azerbaijan
US declines to extend North American trade deal, starting clock to end it while seeking changes
Death toll from devastating earthquake in Venezuela has exceeded 2,000
Israel strikes Gaza to kill Hamas's military wing platoon commander
England eliminates DR Congo in World Cup's round of 32
US VP not rules out possibility of resuming US military action against Iran
Ukrainian drone carrying explosives crashes on Türkiye’s Black Sea coast
Assistant to President: Azerbaijan- EU partnership - looking beyond horizons
Amy Carlon: Azerbaijan and United States continue to work together today for a more connected, more prosperous, and more secure future-PHOTO
Leyen: We also highly appreciate your proposal to lay electric cable to Armenia
Ursula von der Leyen: The European Union believes in the bright future of this region
European Commission President: We will launch a new €20 million program to promote peace in the region
European Commission President: We want to hold the Regional Connectivity Investment Conference in Baku
Ursula von der Leyen: We propose establishing an EU-Azerbaijan Connectivity Partnership
Ursula von der Leyen to President Ilham Aliyev: You have demonstrated personal leadership in promoting peace and cooperation in the region
EU to allocate up to €200 million for transport, energy, and digital connectivity in the South Caucasus
Von der Leyen: I am in Baku to further strengthen the EU-Azerbaijan partnership
Ursula von der Leyen: Azerbaijan has proven to be a reliable partner for the EU
President Ilham Aliyev: Azerbaijan can become a strategic renewable energy partner of the European Commission
President: Cargo volumes through Azerbaijan are increasing in all directions
President Ilham Aliyev: Azerbaijan is the EU's main trading partner in the South Caucasus
President Ilham Aliyev: Half of Azerbaijan's gas exports now go to EU member states
President Ilham Aliyev: Azerbaijan-Armenia normalization process is progressing successfully
President Ilham Aliyev: We have a very active phase of relationship between European Commission and Azerbaijan
Bulgarian delegation visits Azerbaijan
President Ilham Aliyev held one-on-one meeting with President of the European Commission
Armenia's Constitutional Court retires to deliberate on parliamentary election challenge
Azerbaijan’s PM meets with UN Secretary-General's Special Envoy for Road Safety
Russian strikes kill three, injure dozens in Ukraine's Odesa, Kherson and Kharkiv regions
Delegation from National Defense University of Türkiye visits Azerbaijan
Azerbaijan detects contraband worth AZN 4.8 mln at border last month - PHOTO
Azerbaijan's monetary base approaches AZN 24.4 billion
Azerbaijan's Central Bank FX reserves exceed $13.1 billion
EC President: I am in Baku to deepen the EU-Azerbaijan partnership
Trump: Talks with Iran are going well
President of European Commission arrives in Azerbaijan-PHOTO
Russia buys gasoline from India to tackle shortages, sources say
93.6% of respondents positively assess President Ilham Aliyev's performance - SURVEY
Azerbaijan's Jewish communities urge Knesset not to recognize the so-called "Armenian genocide"
Baku Security Forum presented to the international community at the UN
NATO's new security concept to be discussed in Ankara
Iran warns of immediate response to any threat, cites US commitment to restrain Israel