Blinken arrives in Jordan at start of Syria crisis tour

US Secretary of State Antony Blinken gestures upon his arrival in the Red Sea city of Aqaba in Jordan on Dec. 12, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 12 December 2024
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Blinken arrives in Jordan at start of Syria crisis tour

  • Top US diplomat meets King Abdullah II in Aqaba, will travel onwards to Turkey 
  • Blinken has called for “inclusive” process to form Syria’s next government

AQABA, Jordan: US Secretary of State Antony Blinken arrived in Jordan on Thursday at the start of a crisis tour to address the aftermath of the overthrow of Syrian president Bashar Assad, an AFP journalist on his plane said.

The outgoing top US diplomat headed straight to a meeting in the Red Sea city of Aqaba with King Abdullah II and will travel later in the day to Turkiye.

Blinken has called for an “inclusive” process to form Syria’s next government that includes protections for minorities after Islamist rebels ended the iron-fisted rule of Assad, a member of the Alawite community.

Announcing his trip, the State Department said he would also call for a Syria that is not “a base of terrorism or posing a threat to its neighbors” — a nod to the concerns of Turkiye and Israel, which has ramped up strikes on its historic adversary since Assad’s fall.

It is Blinken’s 12th visit to the Middle East since the October 7, 2023 attack by Hamas on Israel, which has responded with a relentless military campaign in Gaza.

His previous trips have ended in disappointment as he sought a ceasefire between US ally Israel and Hamas.

President Joe Biden’s administration leaves office on January 20.

President-elect Donald Trump has described Syria as “a mess” and said that the United States should not get involved, although he has not elaborated on US policy since Assad’s ouster.


90 civilians killed in drone strikes on Sudan’s Kordofan in two weeks: UN

Updated 11 sec ago
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90 civilians killed in drone strikes on Sudan’s Kordofan in two weeks: UN

  • Volker Turk told the United Nations Human Rights Council that the strikes have injured more than 140 people
GENEVA: Drone strikes killed nearly 100 civilians and injured many more in Sudan’s conflict-torn Kordofan region in just over two weeks, the UN rights chief said Monday.
“In a period of just over two weeks to February 6, based on documentation by my office, some 90 civilians were killed and 142 injured in drone strikes,” Volker Turk told the United Nations Human Rights Council in Geneva.
He said the strikes, which were carried out by both the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces and Sudan’s regular army, “struck a World Food Programme convoy, markets, health facilities and residential neighborhoods in South and North Kordofan.”
Turk also said the atrocities unleashed on El-Fasher in Sudan’s Darfur region last October were a “preventable human rights catastrophe."
He warned that they now risked being repeated in the neighboring Kordofan region.
“My office sounded the alarm about the risk of mass atrocities in the besieged city of El-Fasher for more than a year ... but our warnings were ignored,” he said.
He added that he was now “extremely concerned that these violations and abuses may be repeated in the Kordofan region.”