UN Security Council must prevent Syria ‘spiraling out of control’: Guterres

Updated 12 April 2018
Follow

UN Security Council must prevent Syria ‘spiraling out of control’: Guterres

  • UNSC failed to pass a resolution to launch a probe into the alleged use of chemical weapons Saturday in Douma
  • US President Trump has warned that “missiles will be coming” against the Syrian regime in response to the alleged attacks

UNITED NATIONS: The UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres on Wednesday voiced concern to the Security Council’s five permanent members over the “impasse” on Syria, stressing “the need to avoid the situation spiraling out of control.”

His comments follow the Council’s failure to agree on a response to an alleged chemical attack in Syria’s rebel-held Douma over the weekend that has triggered global fury.

“I have also been closely following developments in the Security Council and regret that the Council has so far been unable to reach agreement on this issue,” Guterres said in a statement, referring to members the United States, Russia, China, France and Britain.

“Today, I called the Ambassadors of the five Permanent Members of the Security Council to reiterate my deep concern about the risks of the current impasse and stressed the need to avoid the situation spiraling out of control,” the UN chief said.

“Let us not forget that, ultimately, our efforts must be about ending the terrible suffering of the Syrian people.”

On Tuesday the deeply divided Council failed to pass a resolution to launch or support a probe into the alleged use of chemical weapons Saturday in Douma, near Damascus, despite three separate votes on rival proposals from the United States and Russia.

Washington and Moscow on Wednesday were locked in an increasingly tense stand-off on Syria, with US President Donald Trump warning that “missiles will be coming” against the Syrian regime in response to the alleged attacks, as Russia scrambled to deflect blame from its ally Bashar Assad.


Macron urges Netanyahu to avoid ground offensive in Lebanon

Updated 12 sec ago
Follow

Macron urges Netanyahu to avoid ground offensive in Lebanon

  • “I called on the Israeli prime minister to preserve Lebanon’s territorial integrity and to refrain from a ground offensive,” Macron said
  • Macron said he also spoke to Aoun and Salam, stressing the need for Hezbollah “to immediately cease its attacks”

PARIS: France’s President Emmanuel Macron said he urged Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Wednesday to “refrain from a ground offensive” in Lebanon in their first phone call since last summer.
“I called on the Israeli prime minister to preserve Lebanon’s territorial integrity and to refrain from a ground offensive,” Macron said on X, after Israeli ground forces pushed into several border towns and villages in southern Lebanon.
Lebanon, a former French protectorate, was drawn into the Middle East war on Monday when the Iran-backed militant group Hezbollah attacked Israel in response to the death of Iranian supreme leader Ayatollah Ali Khamenei in US-Israeli strikes at the weekend.
The French president said he also spoke to Lebanon’s President Joseph Aoun and Prime Minister Nawaf Salam, stressing the need for Hezbollah “to immediately cease its attacks against Israel and beyond.”
Relations between Macron and Netanyahu soured last summer after the French leader declared France’s intention to recognize Palestinian statehood.
France formally recognized a Palestinian state in late September, before a fragile ceasefire took hold in the Gaza Strip the following month.
In a letter sent in mid-August, Netanyahu had complained the French plan to recognize a Palestinian state was fueling antisemitism — to which Macron responded that the fight against antisemitism should “not be weaponized.”
Israel’s Foreign Minister Gideon Saar said in early September that his government would not agree to Macron visiting so long as Paris planned to recognize a Palestinian state.