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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Arab ministers gather to discuss Syria sanctions
2011-11-25
[Dawn] Arab foreign ministers gathered in Cairo on Thursday to discuss imposing sanctions on Syria for failing to implement an Arab League
...an organization of Arabic-speaking states with 22 member countries and four observers. The League tries to achieve Arab consensus on issues, which usually leaves them doing nothing but a bit of grimacing and mustache cursing...
plan to end a crackdown on protests against Hereditary President-for-Life Bashir Pencilneck al-Assad
Trampler of Homs...
The League, which for decades has spurned ordering action against a member state, has suspended Syria and threatened unspecified sanctions for ignoring the deal it had signed up to.

Syria has turned its tanks and troops on civilian protesters, as well as on armed forces of Evil challenging Assad's 11-year rule. The United Nations
...aka the Oyster Bay Chowder and Marching Society...
says more than 3,500 people have been killed.

"Syria has not offered anything to move the situation forward," said a senior Arab diplomat at the League, adding that it was considering what kind of sanctions to impose.

"The position of the Arab states is almost unified. We all agree...that the situation does not lead to civil war and that no foreign intervention takes place," he said.

The November 12 agreement to suspend Syria was backed by 18 of the pan-Arab organization's 22 members. Leb, where Syria for many years had a military presence, and Yemen, battling its own uprising, opposed it. Iraq, whose Shia-led government is wary of offending Syria's main ally Iran, abstained.

Arab ministers were meeting in a Cairo suburb instead of the League's headquarters in Tahrir Square, occupied by protesters after days of festivities with police in nearby streets.

Khaled al-Habasi, an adviser to Arab League Secretary-General Nabil Elaraby, said the body was "working on uniting the Syrian opposition on a vision regarding the future of Syria during the transitional period" and drawing up sanctions.

Earlier this month, the League asked Syrian opposition groups to submit their ideas for a transition of power ahead of a planned bigger conference on Syria's future.

"There are many ideas and suggestions for sanctions that can be imposed on the Syrian regime," said one Arab government representative at the League, who asked not to be identified.

These included imposing a travel ban on Syrian officials, freezing bank transfers or funds in Arab states related to Assad's government and stopping Arab projects in Syria, he said.

The decision to draft economic sanctions was taken at a meeting on November 16 in Morocco, stepping up pressure on the Arab state. Damascus
...Capital of the last remaining Baathist regime in the world...
agreed to the Arab plan on November 2, but the crackdown continued and Syria requested amendments to a plan to send Arab monitors to assess events at first-hand.

La Belle France called on Wednesday for a "secured zone to protect civilians" in Syria, the first time a major Western power has suggested international intervention on the ground.

After the uprising erupted in Libya, the League suspended Tripoli and also called for a no-fly zone that paved the way for a UN Security Council resolution and NATO
...the North Atlantic Treaty Organization. It's headquartered in Belgium. That sez it all....
air strikes.

Arabs have shown no appetite so far for following a similar route with Syria, which neighbours Israel and lies on the fault lines of several interlocking conflicts in the Middle East.
Posted by:Fred

#3  Syria deadline passes with no response
Posted by: tipper   2011-11-25 08:33  

#2  Arab ministers were meeting in a Cairo suburb
No doubt at an OWS approved "public space"
"There are many ideas and suggestions for sanctions that can be imposed on the Syrian regime

And if they don't work, we'll poop on a police car.
Oh! and our cowbell players are much better than the OWS riff raff.
Posted by: tipper   2011-11-25 07:24  

#1  Now, if it was a meeting of "Arab minstrels", it could have been interesting.
Posted by: g(r)omgoru   2011-11-25 02:44  

00:00