Times 2

Pressuere on Syria as Arab deadline expires

DAMASCUS, Nov 19 (AFP) - An Arab League deadline for Damascus to stop its lethal crackdown on protesters expires today, a day after Syrian security forces killed at least 12 civilians, including two children.

The latest bloodletting came as international pressure mounted on President Bashar al-Assad's regime.
Turkey and the United States both raised the spectre of civil war, as thousands of protesters took to the streets on Friday to urge nations to expel Syrian ambassadors, defying a massive security presence.
British Foreign Secretary William Hague was to meet Syrian rebel leaders in London on Monday, and a British government source said the opposition figures would also meet senior officials from Prime Minister David Cameron's office.

Syrians living in Turkey chant slogans as they wave Turkish and Syrian flags protesting against the government of Syria's President Bashar al-Assad after Friday prayers during a demonstration in front of the Syrian consulate in Istanbul. AFP

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin called for restraint over the Syrian crisis after meeting his French counterpart Francois Fillon, who accused Assad of being deaf to pressure. "We are calling for restraint and caution. This is our position," Putin told a Moscow news conference, the day after his foreign minister likened the situation in Syria to a civil war.

Russia has deeply opposed Western efforts to internationalise the crisis, fearing it could clear the way for a Libya-style military intervention under a UN mandate. In October, Russia and China vetoed a Western-drafted UN Security Council resolution that would have threatened Assad's regime with "targeted measures" over its crackdown.

"We think that it is indispensable to increase international pressure and we have tabled a resolution at the United Nations. We hope it will find as wide support as possible," Fillon said. French Foreign Minister Alain Juppe, in Turkey ahead of a tour of Arab states, said the "time has come to increase sanctions" on Syria.

Turkey called the risk of civil war real, a warning echoed by analysts monitoring developments in Syria amid growing losses among regular troops at the hands of mutineers. The Arab League said it was examining a Syrian request to make changes to a proposal to send 500 observers to Damascus to help implement a peace deal agreed earlier this month.

Syria has been told by its Arab peers to stop the lethal repression against protesters by 2200 GMT on Saturday or risk sanctions, and the Arab League has already suspended it from the 22-member bloc.
Iran called the suspension "a historic mistake" that would in itself cause civil war.

"The path the Arab League has taken is completely about defeating Syria from inside and triggering a civil war," Alaaddin Boroujerdi, head of the Iranian parliament's foreign policy committee, said in Turkey.
The repression against demonstrations that erupted in Syria in mid-March has claimed more than 3,500 lives, according to UN estimates.

Protesters initially took to the streets seeking democracy in one of the Arab world's most autocratic countries, but they now want the ouster of Assad's regime, and they have the support of much of the Western world.

The foreign minister of Turkey, a once-close Assad ally that has become disillusioned with the regime, sounded the alarm. "I say there is a risk of transforming into civil war," Ahmet Davutoglu told AFP, pointing to the upsurge in attacks by army defectors.

"It is now the right time to stop this massacre and, therefore, the Arab initiative is important," he said. US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton also warned of the potential for civil strife.

"I think there could be a civil war with a very determined and well-armed and eventually well-financed opposition that is, if not directed by, certainly influenced by defectors from the army," she told the US television network NBC.

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