Deutsche Welle, 17 November 2012
Syria's
opposition coalition has appointed an envoy to France. The announcement follows
France's pledge to support the newly formed opposition bloc in its efforts to
topple Syrian President Bashar Assad's government.
French
President Francois Hollande announced that the newly formed National Coalition
of Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces had named someone to liaise
between itself and the French government. The new representative, Mounzir
Makhous, would then become the official ambassador to France if the National
Coalition can form provisional government in Syria (after a ceasefire).
Saturday's
announcement followed a meeting between French and National Coalition leaders
at the Elysee Palace in Paris. President Hollande and French Foreign Affairs Minister
Laurent Fabius met with the council's head, Ahmed Moaz al-Khatib (pictured
above), and Vice President Riad Seif.
According
to the chairman, the Syrian National Council (SNC), which is part of the
newly-formed National Coalition, told the news agency dpa from Paris that the
announcement would herald more productive talks between the newly formed
opposition bloc and its international partners.
"This
is a step forward for all the opposition forces," SNC President George Sabra
told dpa.
"It
opens the door for further positive steps from the West," he said.
France is
the only Western country that has officially recognized the National Coalition
as the sole representative of the Syrian people. The body, made of opposition
groups in and outside of Syria, signed a unity agreement in Qatar last Sunday.
Since the
coalition's formation, Germany, the United Kingdom and the United States have
recognized its legitimacy as a force seeking to end Assad's rule. They have,
however, hesitated to give it full recognition.
Meanwhile
in Syria on Saturday, violence continued between Assad's government and the
opposition. Reports indicated that government forces had sealed off the roads
leading to Damascus, where the fighting has escalated.
The civil
war in Syria began in March 2011 and has since claimed more than 35,000 lives,
according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
kms/mkg (dpa, Reuters, AP, dapd)
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