UN officials appeal for Syria truce, Eastern Ghouta assistance

Syrians, including prominent opposition figures, protesting attacks on rebel-held suburb of eastern Ghouta in Syria’s capital Damascus, gather during a rally outside the Russian Consulate in Istanbul, Thursday, Feb. 22, 2018. (Photo Courtesy of AP)

UNITED NATIONS — Russia expressed its objections Thursday to a draft U.N. resolution intended to implement a 30-day pause in fighting across Syria and lift the siege on the town of eastern Ghouta.

At a Security Council meeting that Moscow requested, its ambassador dismissed as “not possible” the proposed cease-fire and accompanying aid deliveries, along with large-scale medical evacuations.

“Here what we need is not symbolism, not decisions for the sake of decisions, but measures undertaken commensurate with the realities on the ground,” Russian envoy Vassily Nebenzia told council members. “The Security Council needs to reach agreement on feasible — not populistic, severed from reality — decisions.”

Coverage criticized

Nebenzia criticized media coverage of the military operations against eastern Ghouta as a “‘massive psychosis” and said there was a campaign to tarnish Syria and Russia. As he has previously done, he accused the civil society first responders known as the White Helmets of being close to terrorist groups and acting as part of a “misinformation campaign.”

“There is an impression that all of eastern Ghouta is comprised of hospitals alone and that the Syrian army is fighting against those hospitals,” Nebenzia said. “This is a well-known tactic in information warfare.”

The Syrian American Medical Society, a U.S.-based medical relief organization, said Wednesday that 13 medical facilities had been targeted in just two days. Four were destroyed and two had to temporarily close.

Syrians rescue a child following a reported regime air strike in the rebel-held town of Hamouria, in the besieged Eastern Ghouta region on the outskirts of the capital Damascus, Feb. 21, 2018. (Photo Courtesy of AFP)

U.N. humanitarian chief Mark Lowcock who briefed council members via video link from Geneva, urged support for the humanitarian pause.

“You are all as member states aware that your obligations under international humanitarian law are just that: binding obligations,” Lowcock said. “They are not favors to be traded in a game of death and destruction.”

He warned that counterterrorism efforts must not supersede the duty to protect civilians, and he noted that the U.N. human rights office had documented at least 346 civilian deaths this month and 900 injuries.

‘Urgent and concrete action’

“The international community must take urgent and concrete action,” Lowcock said. “What we need is a sustained cessation of hostilities and we need it desperately.”

The U.S. envoy to the U.N. Economic and Social Council said that while Russia had asked for the meeting to find a way out of the situation, it appeared intent on “blocking any meaningful effort to do so.”

“The United States is ready to vote on this resolution right here and right now,” said Ambassador Kelley Currie.

But a vote Thursday did not appear likely.

Sweden’s ambassador said he would first review the amendments put forward by the Russians.

“We are trying to find a way forward that will work for everyone, but of course that has meaningful implications on the ground,” Olof Skoog told reporters.

United Nations Secretary General Antonio Guterres delivers a speech in Lisbon, Feb. 19, 2018. (Photo Courtesy of AP)

On Wednesday, U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres appealed to the council to approve the cease-fire, and especially to help the 400,000 besieged residents of eastern Ghouta, whom he said “live in hell on Earth.”

Last year, the enclave was designated as one of four “de-escalation zones” in a deal with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad’s supporters, Russia and Iran, along with Turkey.

Fighting has escalated as the Syrian military and its allied forces appear to be launching an all-out operation to retake eastern Ghouta, which is one of the last areas near Damascus still under control of the armed opposition. | via Voice of America

Popular

Carlito Galvez steps down as PBBM’s peace adviser

By Brian Campued Presidential Adviser for Peace, Reconciliation, and Unity Carlito Galvez Jr. has stepped from his post and will be replaced by former Interior...

PH to receive 103M liters of diesel this week to augment nat’l fuel supply

By Dean Aubrey Caratiquet As part of various interventions targeted towards alleviating the citizenry’s fuel price and supply woes, the DOE continues to act in...

PBBM installs Eduardo Oban Jr. as new Nat’l Security Adviser

By Dean Aubrey Caratiquet After a press briefing announcement last week noting President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr.’s acceptance of Secretary Eduardo Año’s decision to step...

PBBM: PH to send high-level coordination team to bring Zaldy Co home

By Dean Aubrey Caratiquet After announcing an earlier foiled entry at the border separating Germany and Czech Republic, President Ferdinand R. Marcos Jr. issued updates...