Friday, September 13, 2013
Syria crisis: Geneva talks on chemical weapons enter second day
The US and Russian foreign ministers are due
to hold their second round of talks in Geneva
on how to secure Syria's chemical weapons.
US officials said Thursday's meeting was
comprehensive and lasted about an hour. Talks could
continue over the weekend.
The BBC's Paul Adams in Geneva says it appears
large disagreements still exist between the two
governments.
UN-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi is due to
attend Friday's meeting.
Our correspondent says Mr Brahimi will want to know
whether the talks can develop into a fresh round of
negotiations over a wider political settlement.
On Thursday, Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
and US Secretary of State John Kerry said they hoped
the plan to put Syria's chemical weapons under
international control could avoid US military action.
Russia announced its proposal for dealing with the
escalating chemical weapons crisis on Monday, as
the US Congress was preparing to debate whether to
back President Barack Obama's moves towards
military strikes.
The UN has confirmed it has received documents
from Syria on joining the Chemical Weapons
Convention, a key step in the Russian plan.
Syria's President Bashar al-Assad said data on
chemical weapons would start to be passed to the UN
after 30 days.
But Mr Kerry rejected this, saying such standard
procedures were not relevant when chemical
weapons had already been used.
Washington accuses the Syrian government of killing
hundreds of people in a chemical attack in the
Ghouta area of the capital, Damascus, on 21 August.
The government denies the allegation, blaming
rebels.
In an interview with Russian TV, President Assad
cautioned that Russia's proposal was "not unilateral",
adding: "Syria will accept it if America stops military
threats and if other countries supplying the rebels
with chemical weapons also abide by the
agreement."
Syria's UN envoy Bashar Jaafari later said that
"legally speaking", Syria was now a full member of
the convention.
'Not a game'
While UN chief Ban Ki-moon welcomed the
application, the UN would not immediately confirm
that it had been accepted.
Diplomats said it was possible that the application
still had missing elements and it could be sent back
to Damascus.
Before Thursday's talks, Mr Kerry said the world was
watching to see whether the Assad government
would honour its commitments to give up its
chemical arsenal.
"This is not a game. It has to be real, it has to be
comprehensive, it has to be verifiable, it has to be
credible, it has to be... implemented in a timely
fashion. Finally, there ought to be consequences if it
doesn't take place," he said.
Mr Lavrov said a "solution" to the chemical weapons
issue in Syria would make any military strike by the
United States unnecessary.
The US and Russia have sent large teams to Geneva
that include weapons experts as well as diplomats.
If the talks in Geneva are successful, the US hopes
the disarmament process will be agreed in a UN
Security Council resolution.
However, Russia regards as unacceptable any
resolution backed by military force, or a resolution
that blames the Syrian government for chemical
attacks.
Moscow has already objected to a draft resolution
that would be enforced by Chapter VII of the UN
charter, which would in effect sanction the use of
force if Syria failed in its obligations.
Russia, supported by China, has blocked three
previous draft resolutions condemning the Assad
government.
More than 100,000 people have died since the
uprising against President Assad began in 2011.
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