guardian.co.uk,
David Batty and Jack Shenker in Cairo, Saturday 12 November 2011
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| The Qatari prime minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem bin Jabr al-Thani, right, speaks to Arab League secretary general Nabil al-Arabi at the emergency session. Photograph: Khaled Desouki/AFP/Getty Images |
Syria has
been suspended from the Arab League over its failure to end the bloodshed
caused by brutal government crackdowns on pro-democracy protests in a move that
will increase the international pressure on President Bashar al-Assad.
At an
emergency session of its 22 member states in Cairo to discuss the crisis, the
league decided to exclude Syria until it implements the terms of an earlier
agreed peace deal to stop the violence.
The league
also agreed to impose economic and political sanctions on Syria over its
failure to stop the violence and appealed to its member states to withdraw
their ambassadors from Damascus, the Qatari prime minister, Sheikh Hamad bin
Jassem bin Jabr bin Muhammad Al Thani, said.
"Syria
is a dear country for all of us and it pains us to make this decision," he
said. "We hope there will be a brave move from Syria to stop the violence
and begin a real dialogue toward real reform."
However, he
said the vote did not signal military intervention as happened in Libya, adding
that "no one is talking about a no-fly zone".
"We
were criticised for taking a long time but this was out of our concern for
Syria," he said. "We needed to have a majority to approve those
decisions.
"We
are calling all Syrian opposition parties to a meeting at the Arab League
headquarters to agree a unified vision for the transitional period."
He also
called on the Syrian army to stop its involvement in the killing of civilians.
He said 18
countries had backed the decision while Lebanon, Yemen and Syria voted against
and Iraq abstained.
The
exclusion will come into effect on Wednesday.
Syria's
representative to the Arab League said suspending Damascus breached the
organisation's charter and showed it was "serving a western and American
agenda", Reuters reported.
Wael Merza,
the secretary general of the opposition Syrian National Council, told
al-Jazeera the decision marked "a historic day for Syria as a country, the
Syrian revolution and the Arab League".
But he
added the move could inflame tensions on the ground in the short term.
"Unfortunately,
knowing the nature of the regime, we know the violence will be even more harsh
in the coming few days," he said.
"But
this move isolates the regime to a great extent – economically, diplomatically
and politically."
Outside the
meeting, hundreds of Syrians waving flags and banging drums celebrated as news
of the league's decision filtered out. Children were wrapped in Syrian
headbands, singing broke out and passing cars honked their horns in
appreciation.
The
protesters had called for international protection from Assad's regime. By the
side of the road canvas sacks stuffed with straw were laid out like body bags
in a morgue, each one scrawled with the name of a different Arab nation
undergoing its own political upheaval. Demonstrators said the mock corpses
represented the thousands that have been killed across the region in the
struggle for liberation.
Mohamed
Saidi, an electrical engineer who was born in Homs, flew from his job in Saudi
Arabia to join the protests in Cairo. "If Arab unity still means anything,
then it must mean something today," he said. "A message has to be
sent, and that is 'The killing stops, right now.' We must speak as one on this;
everything else is secondary."
The British
foreign secretary, William Hague, welcomed the decision to suspend Syria over
its repression of political protesters.
He said:
"We support the Arab League in its efforts to bring about an end to the
killing of Syrian people. The continuing violence is deplorable and must
stop."
The
league's decision comes as November looks likely to become the bloodiest month
yet in Syria's eight-month-old uprising. More than 250 Syrian civilians have
been killed in the past 11 days as the regime besieges cities, especially Homs
and Hama, along the border with Lebanon and Idlib in the north.
The Syrian
peace arrangement reached at the start of November involved government troops
and tanks being withdrawn from these regions. However, violence between regime
security forces and opposition groups has not slowed since. In Homs, at least
nine people were killed in battles on Friday between security forces and armed
opposition groups, including defectors. Another seven people were killed in
other parts of Syria.
The deal's
failure had damaged the standing of the pan-Arab body, which has largely
remained flat-footed as revolutions rumbled across the Middle East this year.
Human
Rights Watch has accused the Syrian regime of committing crimes against
humanity throughout the uprising, which has killed more than 3,500 civilians
and about 1,500 members of the security forces.
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