BFF-09 UN Security Council set to vote on Syria ceasefire

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UN Security Council set to vote on Syria ceasefire

UNITED NATIONS, United States, Feb 22, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – The UN Security
Council is expected to vote, probably on Thursday, on a draft resolution
demanding a 30-day ceasefire in Syria to allow deliveries of humanitarian aid
and medical evacuations, diplomats said.

Sweden and Kuwait, which drafted the measure, requested the vote “as soon
as possible,” the Swedish mission said Wednesday, adding that it will likely
be scheduled for Thursday.

It remained unclear whether Russia would resort to its veto to block the
draft resolution.

The push for a vote came after UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres
called for a halt of the “war activities” in Eastern Ghouta, Syria’s rebel
enclave which has come under a fierce bombing campaign by government forces.

As the death toll from airstrikes escalated sharply, Guterres said life
for the 400,000 civilians of Eastern Ghouta had become “hell on earth”.

Russia called for an urgent council meeting on Thursday to discuss the
crisis in Eastern Ghouta which Ambassador Vassily Nebenzia described as a
“complex situation.”

“There are terrorists there who the Syrian army is fighting and the
terrorists are shelling Damascus,” Nebenzia said.

“It’s a complex situation and not just a one-way street,” he said,
according to remarks released by the Russian mission.

US Ambassador Nikki Haley shot back, saying it was “simply preposterous to
claim that these attacks on civilians have anything to do with fighting
terrorism.”

“It’s time to take immediate action in the hopes of saving the lives of
the men, women, and children who are under attack by the barbaric Assad
regime,” she said in a statement.

The United States will support the draft resolution “as should every
member of the council,” Haley added.

– No truce with Al-Qaeda, IS –

The draft resolution would pave the way for the truce to go into effect 72
hours after the adoption of the measure and for aid deliveries and medical
evacuations to begin 48 hours after that.

It demands the immediate lifting of all sieges including in Eastern
Ghouta, Yarmouk, Foua and Kefraya and orders all sides to “cease depriving
civilians of food and medicine indispensable to their survival.”

In a concession to Russia, the draft was amended during tough-going
negotiations last week to specify that the ceasefire does not apply to the
Islamic State group or Al-Qaeda.

That would allow the Syrian government offensive to continue against Al-
Qaeda-linked jihadists in Idlib, the last province in Syria outside the
control of Damascus.

Some diplomats said they were hoping that Russia will abstain.

Sweden and Kuwait presented the measure to the council on February 9, but
negotiations have dragged on as Syrian forces backed by Russia escalated
their fierce offensive.

Close to 300 civilians have been killed since Sunday in Eastern Ghouta
including 24 Syrians who died when government planes dropped barrel bombs on
the town of Kafr Batna on Wednesday, according to the Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights.

More than 340,000 people have been killed and millions driven from the
homes in the war, which next month enters its eighth year with no end in
sight.

More than 13.1 million Syrians are in need of humanitarian aid, of whom 2.9
million live in besieged and hard-to-reach areas.

BSS/AFP/MSY/0921 hrs