'Last chance' to avoid civil war in Syria

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    DAMASCUS: UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan says his peace plan could be the last chance to avoid civil war in Syria, where a truce has failed to end 14 months of bloodshed that monitors say has killed nearly 12,000 people.

     

    Annan told the UN Security Council on Tuesday that the priority in Syria  was “to stop the killing,” and expressed concern that torture, mass arrests and  other human rights violations were intensifying.
     
    Regime forces “continue to press against the population,” despite a  putative truce that started on April 12, but attacks are more discreet because  of the presence of UN military observers, diplomats quoted him as saying.
     
    “The biggest priority, first of all we need to stop the killing,” Annan  told reporters in Geneva, adding that his six-point peace plan is “the only  remaining chance to stabilise the country.”    
     
    Annan briefed the council on his efforts to get President Bashar al-Assad  to implement the plan, which he said was possibly “the last chance to avoid  civil war.”    
     
    He stressed, however, that the peace bid was not an “open-ended”  opportunity for Assad, the diplomats who attended the briefing said.
     
    Annan plans to return to Damascus in the coming weeks, his spokesman said  Tuesday, though this depended on events on the ground there. It would be only  his second visit since his mission began earlier this year.
     
    US ambassador to the UN Susan Rice said Washington’s goal was still the  removal of Assad.
     
    “The United States remains focused on increasing the pressure on the Assad  regime and on Assad himself to step down,” Rice said.
     
    “The situation in Syria remains dire, especially for the millions who  continue to endure daily attacks and are in urgent need of humanitarian  assistance,” she told reporters after Annan’s briefing.
     
    Top US officials are to meet delegates from the Syrian Kurdish National  Council (KNC) in Washington this week to try to build a “more cohesive  opposition” to Assad, a State Department spokesman said.
     
    Annan updated the UN body on the status of his six-point plan, which  includes a UN military observer mission, a day after UN chief Ban Ki-moon  warned world powers were racing against time to prevent all-out civil war in  Syria.
     
    The current 60 or so observers on the ground “have had a calming effect”  and the deployment by the end of the month of a 300-strong team would see a 
    “much greater impact,” Annan said.
     
    While there had been a decrease in military activities however, there had  been “serious violations” of the agreed ceasefire, which included attacks on  government troops and facilities, he added.
     
    “The need for human rights abuses to come to an end cannot be  underestimated,” he stressed.
     
    “This is what the plan is all about.” UN Middle East envoy Terje Roed-Larsen told the Security Council that arms were being smuggled in both directions between Lebanon and Syria.
     
    “What we see across the region is a dance of death at the brink of the  abyss of war,” he told reporters later.
     
    The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said almost 12,000 people, most of  them civilians, had died since the revolt broke out in March 2011.
     
    Of that number, about 800 had died since the truce was supposed to have  taken effect, said the Britain-based watchdog — and at least six civilians had  been killed on Tuesday.
     
    The unrest has persisted despite the presence of UN observers monitoring  the truce and parliamentary elections on Monday.
     
    The opposition boycotted the vote, denouncing it as a sham. The United  States said the exercise was “bordering on ludicrous.”    Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged the UN to bolster its  observer mission well past the 300 authorised under a Security Council  resolution.
     
    “The UN should bolster its mission to Syria with up to 3,000 observers to  give a full picture of the situation in the country,” Erdogan said.
     
    “We support the Annan plan but if someone were to ask me what my hopes are,  I would say I have lost hope.”    
     
    The United Nations has accused both the Syrian regime and rebels of  violating the truce, and China urged all parties to honour their commitments.
     
    “All parties in Syria must abide by their ceasefire commitments, support  and cooperate with the work of the UN supervision team, to create the  conditions to launch an inclusive political process as soon as possible,”  Foreign Minister Yang Jiechi said during a visit by opposition Syrian National  Council chief Burhan Ghalioun.
     
    The International Committee of the Red Cross appealed for 20 million euros  ($26 million) to step up its aid to Syria.
     
    The group has been working alongside the Syrian Arab Red Crescent to bring  humanitarian relief to about 1.5 million people affected by the bloodshed.
     
    The ICRC is providing monthly food parcels for about 100,000 people in  particular need, president Jakob Kellenberger said. AFP
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