General of the United Nations Ban Ki-moon
arrives for a meeting with the members of
the Bosnian tri-partite Presidency during
his visit to Sarajevo, Bosnia, Wednesday,
July 25, 2012. The Secretary-General is on a
regional tour of southeastern Europe. (AP
Photo/Amel Emric)
UNITED NATIONS (AP) — Arab nations
announced plans Wednesday to go to the U.N.
General Assembly and seek approval of a
resolution calling for a political
transition and establishment of a democratic
government in Syria following the Security
Council's failure to address the escalating
crisis.
Saudi Arabia's Ambassador Abdallah
al-Mouallimi and Qatari diplomat Abdulrahman
Al-Hamadi announced plans to seek action by
the 193-member world body, where there are
no vetoes, during a Security Council debate
on the Middle East.
Last week, Russia and China again vetoed a
Western-backed Security Council resolution
aimed at pressuring President Bashar Assad's
government to stop the violence by
threatening sanctions if he didn't withdraw
heavy weapons from populated areas within 10
days.
"The Arab states have decided to head to the
General Assembly over the situation in
Syria," al-Mouallimi told the council.
Al-Hamadi said the Syrian government's
threat to use chemical and biological
weapons, and other threats to the region,
"have made us feel even further regret with
the inability of the Security Council to
deal with the Syrian crisis in an effective
manner."
Therefore, he said, "the Arab group in New
York is going to the General Assembly of the
United Nations to deal with the serious
threat represented by the Syrian crisis."
The push for action in the General Assembly
followed an appeal earlier Wednesday by U.N.
Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon for the world
to unite in its response to Syria's civil
war and do all it can to stop what he called
the slaughter taking place there.
"Today, the international community is being
tested in Syria," he said in a speech to
Bosnia's parliament in Sarajevo, the once
devastated city at the heart of the 1992-95
Bosnian war.
"Without unity, there will be more
bloodshed. More deadlock means more dead,"
Ban said. "That is why, here in the heart of
a healing Bosnia and Herzegovina, I make a
plea to the world: Do not delay. Come
together. Act. Act now to stop the slaughter
in Syria."
Ban said other countries intervened in Libya
and the Ivory Coast to stop widespread
killing there, but failed during the Bosnian
war to prevent Bosnian Serbs from killing
more than 8,000 Muslim Bosniaks in
Srebrenica while the town was officially
under U.N. protection.
"Quite simply, we must do better in seeing
atrocities coming and telling it like it is.
We cannot take refuge behind strong words
and weak action," he said.
Ban had called for stepped up pressure on
the Syrian government but he did not say
exactly what the international community
should do now.
Unlike Security Council resolutions, General
Assembly resolutions are not legally
binding, but they can reflect and impact
global opinion.
U.N. diplomats said Arab League ministers
decided to seek a strong General Assembly
resolution at a meeting last weekend.
The diplomats, speaking on condition of
anonymity because the text has not been
circulated, said it will likely include
language on the chemical weapons threat, an
endorsement of Annan's peace plan and the
guidelines for a political transition
adopted at a conference in Geneva last
month, a demand to allow humanitarian
workers access to the entire country, and
possibly a call for other countries to
follow Arab League sanctions.
Syria's U.N. Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari
accused the Saudis and Qataris of
interfering militarily, financially and
politically in Syria and shedding "crocodile
tears over the suffering of the Syrian
people."
He also accused them of "conspiring" against
Annan's peace plan and the guidelines for a
political transition in order to escalate
tensions against Syria and its interests in
the General Assembly after they failed to do
so in the Security Council.
The General Assembly voted overwhelmingly in
February for a resolution backing an Arab
League plan calling for Assad to hand power
to his vice president and immediately stop
the bloody crackdown.
___
Cerkez reported from Sarajevo,
Bosnia-Herzegovina

Associated Press
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