Conflict
Crisis/Conflict/Terrorism
UN works on to tackle worsening Syria crisis

06 Nov 2013, 12:07 pm Print

UN works on to tackle worsening Syria crisis
New York, Nov 6 (JEN): International efforts to bring about a peaceful solution to the crisis in Syria continue apace, with two United Nations officials reporting Tuesday on their work towards convening a political conference that brings all sides in the conflict to the negotiating table, and overseeing the destruction of the country’s chemical weapons stockpiles, reported on their latest activities Tuesday.

The UN still hopes for a so-called Geneva II conference before the end of the year, Lakhdar Brahimi told journalists in Geneva, reiterating the importance of a political solution to the crisis, which is now in its third year.
 
“As far as the United Nations is concerned, we are ready and the Secretary-General is impatient to get the conference going,” said Brahimi, the Joint Special Representative of the UN and the League of Arab States.
 
Despite trilateral discussions between the UN, Russia and the United States, diplomats were unable to announce a date for the conference and plan to meet again on 25 November.
 
Brahimi noted that part of the delay in convening the conference is due to problems among the Syrian opposition.
 
“They are divided, that is no secret for anybody, and they are facing all sorts of problems and they are working very, very hard to get ready,” he stressed, adding that he hoped the opposition would be able to agree on a delegation to attend the potential conference.
 
Following the trilateral discussion, Brahimi participated in a meeting with the remaining countries that are among the five permanent members of the Security Council – China, France and the United Kingdom – and then with the countries that border Syria, namely Iraq, Jordan, Lebanon, and Turkey.
 
Finally, he met with representatives of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) and UN humanitarian agencies.
 
Brahimi noted that Kuwait would host a second donor conference to raise aid for Syrian refugees at the request of Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. The first conference raised USD 1.5 billion in pledges.
 
“I hope the donors will be as generous,” Brahimi said, adding that the current solution to the humanitarian disaster is not sustainable and reiterating the need for a political end to the conflict.
 
“The only solution to the humanitarian crisis is a political solution to the crisis,” he reiterated “There is no military solution. The Government is not going to win and the opposition is not going to win.”
 
Meanwhile, speaking to the press at UN Headquarters in New York following her first briefing to the Security Council, Sigrid Kaag, Special Coordinator of the Joint Mission of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) overseeing the destruction of Syria’s chemical weapons programme, said she had reported on the Mission’s first full month of work.
 
She told the Council of the progress to date “under difficult circumstances,” and added that the Syrian authorities were cooperating constructively with the Mission. Kaag also stressed the need for future international assistance subject to the approval of the destruction plan presented by the Syrian Government.
 
“We had a very good discussion with Council members; questions were raised concerning staff safety and security and the possible anticipated role of the Joint Mission, obviously continued verification monitoring but also possibly support for implementation of the final phases of the overall plan,” she said
 
She said that Council members had also asked questions about the two sites the Joint Mission had been unable to visit. Those sites had been declared “abandoned” in the Syrian Government’s initial declaration to the OPCW. She reiterated the agency’s intent to have inspectors visit those sites in the future “subject to security conditions in country.”
 
Asked by a reporter if she thought Syria had the capability to destroy the weapons or if that task should be handled by another country, Kaag said that a team of officials from the UN, the OPCW and Damascus was looking at that issue this week in The Hague and a decision would be made by mid-November, when the OPCW Executive Council is set to meet on next steps.
 
To a question on funding, she said that the UN voluntary fund set up to support the Joint Mission had received some USD 2 million, while the OPCW mechanism had roughly USD 10 million, which would carry the Joint Mission through the end of the year. She hoped that after the OPCW Executive Council meeting, a financial plan that covers the overall planned work of the Mission could be devised.
 
Lakhdar Brahimi, Joint Special Representative for Syria and Sigrid Kaag, Special Coordinator of the OPCW-UN Joint Mission. UN Photo/Violaine Martin/Paulo Filgueiras