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Syria: EU rejects call to lift arms embargo

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German Chancellor Angela Merkel attends a press conference at the EU Headquarters on Friday in Brussels,

German Chancellor Angela Merkel attends a press conference at the EU Headquarters on Friday in Brussels, during a two-day European Union leaders summit. PHOTO BY AFP 

By Agencies

Posted  Sunday, March 17  2013 at  02:00

In Summary

Call blocked. European leaders block call to lift embargo on supplying weapons to opposition

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Britain and France found themselves isolated on Friday after their call to lift an embargo on supplying weapons to Syrian rebels were rejected by EU leaders, who are fearful of sparking an arms race with Russia and escalating a conflict which has already left 70,000 people dead.

France’s President Francois Hollande went into the EU summit on Thursday, calling on his fellow leaders to lift the embargo before it expires in May. Prime Minister David Cameron’s office said they wanted to use the two-year anniversary of the uprising on Friday to prod other nations into stepping up assistance.

But at meetings on Friday, Germany, Austria, Sweden and other nations disagreed. “One has to ask if it doesn’t fan the flames of the conflict,” said Germany’s Chancellor Angela Merkel. “What is important is to act together as Europeans, just the fact that two have changed their minds is not enough for 25 to follow suit.”

Ms Merkel added that the EU foreign policy chief – Catherine Ashton, a Labour peer – had also spoken out against putting weapons in the hands of the opposition. “Lady Ashton said Iran and Russia were looking for the development to resume arms exports to (Syrian President Bashar) al-Assad,” the chancellor said.

Russia has stood by Assad throughout the conflict and continues to ship weapons to the regime, despite pleas from Europe and the United States to use their clout to force Assad to negotiate. One diplomat struggled to come up with the names of any countries that backed Mr Hollande and Mr Cameron’s proposals: “There are many member states that have reservations,” the diplomat said.

Cameron’s push
Speaking after the meetings, the Prime Minister said that there was a “good understanding” among other EU members of the urgency of finding a solution to the bloodshed in Syria. He said the discussions would continue at an EU foreign ministers meeting later this month.

The arms embargo was relaxed last month to allow for non-lethal assistance to be channelled to the rebels. It still forbids the provision of guns, and France and Britain have argued that this is creating an imbalance as arms flow from Russia and Iran to regime forces. The embargo is up for renewal on May 31, so if Mr Cameron and Mr Hollande do not manage to cobble together support for amending it, they could simply vote against renewing the measures. This, however, could mean a whole package of sanctions against the regime would also expire.

Asked if he would act without Europe’s support, Mr Cameron said Britain was a sovereign country that would act “in our national interests“. The debate comes as Syrians marked two years since the uprising began in the town of Deraa. Rebels vowed attacks to mark the day, and regime forces beefed up security in the capital, Damascus.

Louay Almokdad, a political coordinator for the Free Syrian Army, urged Britain and France to keep pushing to provide the rebels with anti-aircraft weapons, anti-tank missiles and logistical support.
“At the moment, we don’t have enough to create a safe zone for civilians in the north,” he said. “We have given all the guarantees they want. The weapons would be under trained officers and they would not go to any extremist groups.”

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Hollande defends Syria weapons plan

France’s president has defended his plan to supply arms to Syria’s rebels, as activists mark two years since the anti-government uprising began.

Speaking after an EU meeting, Francois Hollande said the rebels had given guarantees that weapons would not fall into the wrong hands.
France and the UK want the EU to lift its arms embargo, but Germany says it has not yet decided if it agrees.

An estimated 70,000 people have been killed and one million have fled Syria. The status of the rebels has become one of the thorniest issues for foreign governments.

A number of explosions and suicide attacks have been blamed on armed groups believed to have links to al-Qaeda and the rebels.
Russia remains an ally of President Bashar al-Assad’s government and opposes arming the rebels.

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