In a rare show of unity among world powers, the U.N. Security
Council unanimously adopted a resolution on Saturday ordering the
warring parties in Syria to stop blocking the delivery of humanitarian
aid, though without the immediate prospect of punishment for those who
disobey.
The resolution, which is legally binding, addresses a conflict that
has gone on for nearly three years, killing more than 100,000 people and
creating more than 6 million refugees. It calls on the Syrian
government to allow relief agencies to enter the country, including from
across national borders; decries the dropping of barrel bombs by
government aircraft; and strongly condemns terror attacks, plainly
referring to some of the rebels fighting to overthrow President Bashar
Assad.
It also calls on the U.N. secretary-general to submit progress
reports, and while it does not threaten sanctions, economic or
otherwise, it promises to take “further steps” against those who do not
comply. Britain and France, among Syria’s most biting critics on the
council, indicated their readiness to introduce a resolution calling for
tougher measures in the event of noncompliance.
Before the vote, council diplomats said it was clear there would be
no chance of approval from Russia, Syria’s strongest ally, if the
measure contained any language on sanctions. So just before the text was
finalized Wednesday night, the suggestion of sanctions came out; late
Friday afternoon, Moscow signaled its assent. The countries pushing for
the resolution were clearly aiming to put it up for a vote during the
Olympic Games in Sochi to exert the greatest leverage on Russia.
On Saturday morning, as he entered the council chambers, the Russian
ambassador to the United Nations, Vitaly I. Churkin, told reporters: “Of
course we’re going to support it. It’s a pretty good resolution.”
Inside, Churkin made a point to say that the Assad government had
made “progress” in facilitating the delivery of humanitarian aid. There
was no suggestion that Moscow’s support for the Assad government was
diminishing, though one U.N. diplomat said Russia’s vote could be a sign
of its “uneasiness” over the government’s unwillingness to make aid
delivery easier.
The U.S. ambassador to the United Nations, Samantha Power, emphasized
that Churkin had joined in the condemnation of the Syrian government.
“We are heartened that our Russian colleagues have joined us in
demanding the end of the use of indiscriminate weapons like barrel
bombs,” she told reporters after the vote, “and how all the parties, but
particularly the regime, need to stop using food and medicine as a
weapon of war.”
Diplomats said the next test for Russia would come after the United
Nations submits its first monitoring report in 30 days. If Syria is
deemed to be violating the resolution, critics of the Assad government
will probably call for tougher measures, especially if it seems likely
to miss a deadline to destroy its chemical weapons arsenal by June 30.
Since the Syrian conflict broke out in March 2011, Russia has vetoed
three resolutions trying to address broader concerns. It initially
dismissed the need for this one, too, saying that it preferred to let
the warring parties on the ground agree to local cease-fires, one by
one, so as to let in food and medicine. But Russia eventually signaled
its intention to engage by putting forward a resolution of its own, and
several rounds of negotiations ensued.
In a nod to Russian demands, the resolution “strongly” condemns the
“increased terrorist attacksresulting in numerous casualties and
destruction carried out by organizations and individuals associated with
al-Qaida, its affiliates and other terrorist groups.” The Syrian
government refers to all of the rebels as terrorists.
In several places, the resolution points to the government’s singular
role in blocking aid. For instance, it “demands that all parties, in
particular the Syrian authorities, promptly allow rapid, safe and
unhindered humanitarian access for U.N. humanitarian agencies and their
implementing partners, including across conflict lines and across
borders, in order to ensure that humanitarian assistance reaches people
in need through the most direct routes.”
Inside Syria, both parties tried to use the resolution to bolster their positions and condemn their enemies.
Monzer Akbik, chief of staff to the president of the opposition
Syrian National Coalition, said the group welcomed the resolution but
was skeptical that the government would live up to its obligations.
“This means that the international community is talking in one voice
and saying that the starvation and siege that the regime is inflicting
on many areas in Syria should stop now and the regime should allow
access to these areas,” he said.
For his part, the Syrian ambassador to the United Nations, Bashar
al-Jaafari, said the delivery of aid “cannot be achieved unless it is
accompanied by an end to terrorism.”
The most intense negotiations, diplomats said in interviews Saturday,
concerned whether to include language on aerial bombardments,
particularly of barrel bombs, which was a priority to several Western
countries, and a reference to specific besieged communities. Naming
those communities pointed to the Syrian government’s role in blocking
aid. For the Russians as well as the Chinese, the subject of allowing
aid across Syria’s national borders was especially troublesome. By late
Wednesday, diplomats said, language on barrel bombs, besieged
communities and cross-border access remained in the draft.
Also by Wednesday, the three countries that had drafted the document –
Australia, Jordan and Luxembourg – had decided that the time for
negotiations was over.
“Our bottom lines had been preserved,” one council diplomat said. “We
had incorporated a good deal of some of the concerns from Russia and
China.”
After the vote, Ban Ki-moon, the U.N. secretary-general, told the
council: “This resolution should not have been necessary. Humanitarian
assistance is not something to be negotiated; it is something to be
allowed by virtue of international law.”
Jan Egeland, the former U.N. relief coordinator who now heads the
Norwegian Refugee Council, said the secretary-general must be
“ruthlessly honest” in monitoring the war.
“The test of whether this resolution is being implemented is simple,”
he said by email. “All parties must enable real progress over the next
30 days in some key areas: by lifting sieges on populated areas and
ensuring civilians in besieged communities access to humanitarian aid,
by opening border crossings from neighboring countries for deliveries of
lifesaving aid, by an effective system for approving humanitarian aid
convoys to hard-to-reach areas, by cessation of attacks on civilian
targets like schools and hospitals.”
Source: The Salt Lake Tribune
Wednesday, February 26, 2014
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