Satellites said to show Syria not abiding by truce

GENEVA (AP) — Satel­lite imagery and other cred­i­ble reports show that, despite its claims, Syria has failed to with­draw all of its heavy weapons from pop­u­lated areas as required by a cease-fire deal, inter­na­tional envoy Kofi Annan’s spokesman Ahmad Fawzi said Tuesday.

Annan, who was giv­ing a speech in Swe­den and brief­ing the U.N. Secu­rity Coun­cil in New York, called on the Syr­ian gov­ern­ment to fully imple­ment its com­mit­ments under the truce, Fawzi told U.N. reporters in Geneva.

This means with­drawal of all heavy armoury (weapons) from pop­u­la­tion cen­ters and (send­ing them) back to the bar­racks. They are claim­ing that this has hap­pened. Satel­lite imagery, how­ever, and cred­i­ble reports show that this has not fully hap­pened, so this is unac­cept­able,” Fawzi said.

Annan also has become aware that U.N. cease-fire mon­i­tors are met with brief lulls of vio­lence when they enter con­flict areas such as Homs and Hama in Syria, and that peo­ple who speak them appear to be in dan­ger afterward.

When they (are there) the guns are silent. We have cred­i­ble reports that when they leave, the (shelling) start again,” Fawzi said.

There also have been cred­i­ble reports about peo­ple who talk to the observers later being “approached by the Syr­ian secu­rity forces or the Syr­ian army, or even worse, per­haps killed and this is totally unac­cept­able,” he said.

The cease-fire is part of Annan’s peace plan, which aims to stop the 13-month-long vio­lence in Syria, where more than 9,000 peo­ple are believed to have died dur­ing a gov­ern­ment crack­down on a pop­u­lar uprising.

Right now, there are only a small num­ber of mon­i­tors on the ground in Syria, but the U.N. Secu­rity Coun­cil has autho­rized up to 300.

With 11 or 12 mon­i­tors, you can’t be every­where, and there are many cities that have seen destruc­tion and have seen fight­ing, and we have to be present,” Fawzi said. “With up to 300, we will be able to mon­i­tor more cities than two to three at a time.”

Annan said in a speeach at Sweden’s Lund Uni­ver­sity that the use of U.N. staff to mon­i­tor con­flicts such as the one in Syria ulti­mately can offer “no guar­an­tee of pro­tec­tion” with­out strong inter­na­tional backing.

The use of observers requires “skilled staff, strong man­dates and clear inter­na­tional sup­port” — and their safety can­not always be assured, Annan said.

Annan spoke to mark the cen­te­nary of the birth of Swedish diplo­mat Raoul Wal­len­berg, who is widely cred­ited with res­cu­ing tens of thou­sands of Jews in Nazi-occupied Hun­gary dur­ing World War II.

He said world pow­ers should not always wait for con­flicts to “erupt” before send­ing envoys or monitors.

Too often the Secu­rity Coun­cil response is weak or non-existent; its actions dri­ven not by prin­ci­ple but by pol­i­tics and selec­tiv­ity,” he said of the U.N.‘s most pow­er­ful arm.

Upload Your Resume Here! (FREE) to apply for any job list­ing posted on this site.

Arti­cle Source: http://hosted.ap.org/dynamic/stories/S/SYRIA_DIPLOMACY?SITE=TNJAC&SECTION=HOME&TEMPLATE=DEFAULT