Arab foreign ministers during their meeting at the Arab League
headquarters in Cairo January 22, 2012 (Reuters / Suhaib Salem)
The Arab League's Foreign Minister demanded on Sunday that Syrian leader Bashar al-Assad delegate the presidency to his vice president and set up a unity government, as a step towards early parliamentary and presidential elections.
That is
according to Qatari Prime Minister Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani, who spoke to a
news conference following Arab League talks in Cairo. He also noted that the
League would ask the UN Security Council for its endorsement.
The League
urged the Syrian leadership to form a new government within two months, and to
start dialogue with opposition forces. And according to the League’s statement,
in three months the new unity government will have to elect a council to write
a new constitution. None of the Arab League's proposals support the idea of
military intervention in Syria.
Earlier,
the League decided to extend its the fact-finding mission in Syria for another
month.
But
political analyst Omar Nashabe says the observer mission to Syria has shown
that both sides of the conflict are guilty of abuses.
“I think
it’s time in Syria for dialogue, and President Assad has created the platform
for such dialogue. At the same time, the Arab Leagues has declared an extension
for the monitors’ mission – which lacks manpower, equipment and training. It
needs more time to actually build a comprehensive report.”
However,
Nashabe says, the first preliminary report had leaked to the media – and as a
result, he had already seen to parts of it.
“The report
shows that there are some grave violations on both sides – the opposition and
the so-called Syrian Free Army, they have been also using heavy gun fire
against civilians. It’s time that the opposition shows good faith, shows
positive signs because it is in the interests of no one that NATO steps in:
there will be destruction, chaos as was the case in Libya. And as we have
recently seen there, things are not turning into the beautiful democracy
everybody was dreaming of.”
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