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British Foreign Secretary William
Hague on Monday called on Syrian opposition to "unite"
against President Bashar al-Assad, while Russian Foreign Minister
Sergei Lavrov chided such calls from Western countries as provocation.
"It is important for opposition groups to be able to
put aside their own differences and come to a united view
of the way forward," Hague made the remarks after meeting
with Syrian opposition representatives in London on Monday.
However, he said Britain was not ready to recognize the Syrian
opposition as the country's legitimate government.
"We are not at the point of a formal recognition, partly
because there is not a single council as there was in Libya.
They are not in control of territory in Syria as the council
was in Libya and the international community has not reached
that point," Hague said.
Meanwhile, Lavrov said that "so far, when the Arab League
(AL) urges to stop the violence and start dialogues, Western
countries and some countries in the region call for the opposition
to avoid such dialogues with Bashar al-Assad's regime."
Abuses over international law and the UN authority cannot
be allowed, Lavrov added.
The remarks of Hague and Lavrov came after Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad's confirmation that he would press on with
a crackdown against what he called armed groups targeting
civilians, policemen, army personnel in his country despite
increased pressure from the AL.
"The conflict will continue and the pressure to subjugate
Syria will continue," Assad told the Britain's Sunday
Times newspaper. "However, I assure you that Syria will
not bow down and that it will continue to resist the pressure
being imposed on it," he said.
Commenting on Assad's remarks, Turkish Prime Minister Recep
Tayyip Erdogan warned on Monday that the Syrian regime was
destined to fall sooner or later.
"No matter how hard you try to hold on to power with
your tanks and your weapons, a day will come and you will
go," said Erdogan at a meeting with chief Muslim clerics
from African countries and communities held in Istanbul.
The AL peace plan reached with Syria earlier this month has
virtually perished, with each side blaming the other of showing
no sincerity. The Syrian authorities said that the plan contains "impossible" phrases that encroach upon Syria's
sovereignty while the AL said that Syria has demanded amendments
that contradict the plan's essence.
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Moallem said that some Arab
states are using the AL as a tool to take the Syrian file
to the UN Security Council, but stressed that "there
would be no civil war no matter how they tried to ignite it
... thanks to the awareness of the Syria people."
In yet another move to place pressure on Damascus, the AL
has said that it will sponsor a meeting combining different
opposition figures to help them form a united front.
Now, there are mounting calls among Syrians, even anti-regime
activists, to halt all kinds of violent acts whether they
are against government's targets or not as armed resistance
has practically become true.
The so-called Syrian Free Army (SFA), an opposition armed
force composed of army defectors, has recently attacked the
headquarters of air intelligence forces in Damascus' suburb
of Harasta, which was denied by the government.
The SFA claimed responsibility for the Harasta attack, and
its founder, Riyad al-Assaad, a Turkey-based defected army
colonel, said during an interview with al-Jazeera TV that
the SFA is an armed opposition force that has its own weapons
and funds.
Opposition groups claimed that the ruling al-Baath party's
building in the very heart of Damascus was hit at dawn on
Sunday by two rocket-propelled grenades. But Moallem said
that such news is absolutely baseless and Syria's state-run
TV aired footage of the building which looks intact.
However, residents at the area confirmed that they awoke
at a loud explosion, a matter the minister had stopped short
of explaining
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