Yahoo – AFP, Simon
Martelli, 12 November 2012
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Delegates
at the conference of the Friends of Syria group of Arab and
Western states in
Marrakesh on December 12, 2012
|
Arab and
Western countries opposed to President Bashar al-Assad are to recognise an
opposition bloc as the sole representative of Syrians, according to a statement
seen by AFP on Wednesday.
The
declaration to be issued Wednesday at a "Friends of Syria" meeting in
Morocco coincides with battlefield gains by jihadists fighting Assad's forces,
and a rapidly deteriorating refugee situation as winter sets in.
"The
participants acknowledged the National Coalition as the legitimate
representative of the Syrian people and the umbrella organisation under which
Syrian opposition groups are gathering," said the statement to be approved
at the meeting.
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Syrian
Ahmed Moaz al-Khatib (left), leader
of the National Coalition for Opposition
Forces, and George Sabra (right), of the
Syrian National Council, walk into the
Arab
League headquarters in Cairo.
|
It comes
just a day after US President Barack Obama endorsed the National Coalition as the
legitimate representative of the Syrian people, following a similar move by the
European Union this week.
Russia, the
Assad regime's most powerful ally, expressed surprise at the move, with Foreign
Minister Sergei Lavrov saying "the United States has decided to place all
its bets on an armed victory of the National Coalition".
In its
communique, the Friends of Syria again called on Assad to stand down, and
stressed his regime would not escape punishment for violations of international
law.
"Assad
has lost legitimacy and should stand aside to allow the launching of a
sustainable political transition process."
And it
warned Syria's government against using biological weapons, saying this
"would draw a serious response from the international community".
British
Foreign Secretary William Hague described the growing recognition of the
National Coalition as "real progress".
"Then
the important thing is to channel more assistance through them -- in our
case... non-lethal assistance... and then of course we need more humanitarian
aid," he said.
Participants
at the Morocco meeting called for unimpeded access for humanitarian
organisations working in Syria, and said they were ready "to increase the
funding of the National Coalition relief activities".
Under
pressure to unite, the Syrian opposition agreed in Doha on November 11 to
establish the National Coalition and group the various rebel forces under a
supreme military council.
But
jihadist rebels in Aleppo, a key front line in northern Syria, rejected the
coalition, saying they want an Islamic state.
Among them
was Al-Nusra Front, which the United States blacklisted on Tuesday as a
"terrorist" organisation, citing its links to Al-Qaeda in Iraq.
With the
total death toll from the civil war now topping 42,000, according to a rights
monitor, the UN refugee agency said the number of Syrian refugees who had fled
to neighbouring states and North Africa had now passed half a million.
In the
latest violence, two bomb blasts killed one person and wounded several in
Damascus and a southeastern suburb of the Syrian capital on Wednesday, the
state SANA news agency reported.
Analysts
say Assad's regime has been trying to establish a secure perimeter around
Damascus at all costs in a bid to be in a position to negotiate a solution to
the conflict.
Despite the
National Coalition's growing recognition, some EU member states have expressed
reservations about the group, in terms of how representative it is and its
democratic commitment.
A coalition
spokesman insisted, however, that there were "inaccuracies" around
Al-Nusra.
Yaser
Tabbara said the extremist group could be divided into two factions -- one that
supported the regime and committed acts of terror, and the other that did not
-- and urged dialogue with the latter.
"They're
not going to be a stumbling block in the recognition of the coalition," he
told AFP.
Tabbara
also underlined hopes the Marrakesh meeting would help alleviate a mounting
humanitarian crisis and support the needs of "liberated" areas, in
terms of salaries and services, which the group estimates at nearly $500
million per month.
Syria's
influential Muslim Brotherhood said the US decision to blacklist Al-Nusra was
"wrong and hurried" and that "Bashar al-Assad is the only
terrorist in Syria".



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