Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Arab monitors head to Syria, opposition skeptical


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BEIRUT: The Arab League sent monitors to Syria on Monday even though President Bashar Assad’s regime has only intensified its crackdown on dissent in the week since agreeing to the Arab plan to stop the bloodshed.
Activists say government forces have killed several hundred civilians in the past week.
At least 23 more deaths were reported on Monday from intense shelling in the center of the country, just hours before the first 60 monitors were to arrive.
The opposition says thousands of government troops have been besieging the Baba Amr district of in the central city of Homs for days and the government is preparing a massive assault on the area.
France expressed strong concerns about the continued deterioration of the situation in Homs.
Foreign Ministry spokesman Bernard Valero demanded Syrian authorities allow the Arab League observers immediate access to the city.
”The repression and unprecedented violence committed by the Damascus regime must cease and everything must be done to stop the drama going on behind closed doors in the city of Homs,” the French statement said.
In Cairo, an Arab League official said this monitoring mission was the Syrian regime’s ”last chance” to reverse course.
”Will they facilitate the mission’s work or try and curb its movements? Let’s wait and see,” the official said on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivity of the subject.
The Arab League plan agreed to by Assad on last Monday requires the government to remove its security forces and heavy weapons from city streets, start talks with opposition leaders and allow human rights workers and journalists into the country.
The monitors are supposed to ensure compliance, but so far there is no sign that Assad is implementing any of the terms, much less letting up on his brutal crackdown.
Although Syria shows no sign of altering its course, the Arab League was sticking to its plan. The team, including Iraqis, Tunisians and Algerians, left Cairo on Monday evening and arrived in Damascus, said Arab League official Ali al-Garoush.
Opposition members say the regime’s agreement to the Arab plan is a farce.
”I very much doubt the Syrian regime will allow the observers to do their work,” said prominent opposition figure Waleed al-Bunni from Cairo.
”I expect them to try and hinder their movements by claiming that some areas are not safe, intimidating them or sending them to places other than the ones they should go to.”
Some anti-government protesters have even criticised the League’s stance to the point of accusing it of complicity in the killings.
Activists said Syrian forces shelled the Baba Amr district of Homs with mortars and sprayed heavy machine gun fire in the most intense assault since the siege began on Friday.
Baba Amr has been a center for anti-government protests and army defections and has seen repeated crackdowns by the Syrian regime in recent months.
The Syrian conflict is becoming increasingly militarized with growing clashes between army defectors and troops.
Rami Abdul-Rahman, who heads the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, described the attacks in Homs as a kind of ”hysteria” as government forces desperately try to get the situation there under control ahead of the monitors’ arrival.
”The observers are sitting in their hotel in Damascus while people are dying in Homs,” he said.
The Observatory called on the monitors ”to head immediately to Baba Amr to be witnesses to the crimes against humanity that are being perpetrated by the Syrian regime.”
In Cairo, Arab League chief Nabil Elaraby told reporters after meeting with the monitors that the mission will begin work on Tuesday.
Up to 500 monitors are to be eventually deployed and Syria has only agreed for them to stay one month.
Anwar Malek, a member of the monitoring mission, insisted they will have absolute freedom of movement in Syria, adding that the team will travel to flashpoint cities including Homs, Daraa, Idlib and Hama.
He and other observers refused to disclose the exact travel itinerary, saying they preferred to maintain some secrecy to ensure the mission’s success.
The Arab League has suspended Syria’s membership and imposed sanctions on Damascus but is deeply divided on how to respond to the crisis.
Gulf countries such as Qatar and Saudi Arabia have taken a tougher line and are more inclined toward Security Council action on Syria.
But other countries, wary of Syria’s influence in the region, prefer an Arab solution to the crisis.
Activists say the regime has only stepped up its crackdown on anti-government protesters in the week since it agreed to the Arab plan.
At least 275 civilians have been killed by government forces since then, and another 150 people died in clashes between army defectors and regime troops, most of them defectors.