The U.N. General Assembly is expected to approve Wednesday an Arab-backed resolution calling for a political transition in Syria and strongly condemning President Bashar Assad's regime for its escalating use of heavy weapons, U.N. diplomats said.
But the resolution will not have as much support as the assembly's previous resolutionlast August denouncing Syria's crackdown ondissent, the diplomats said Tuesday, speakingon condition of anonymity because consultations have been private.
The 193-member world body is scheduled to vote Wednesday morning on the resolution which also condemns Syria's "gross violations" of human rights, assembly spokesman Nikola Jovanovic said.
The Arab group decided to seek approval of awide-ranging resolution on Syria in the General Assembly,
where there are no vetoes, to reflect international dismay at the increasing death toll, now more than 70,000, and the failure to end the more than two-year-old conflict. Unlike Security Council resolutions, which are legally binding, General Assembly resolutions cannot be enforced. But approval of an assembly resolution would counter the paralysis of the deeply divided Security Council, where Syria's allies, Russia and China, have vetoed three Western-backed resolutions aimed at pressuring Assad to endthe violence. Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin has sent letters urging all U.N. members to vote"no" on the new resolution.
He called it "one-sided and biased" as well as"counterproductive" given the understandingreached by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in Moscow earlier this month to convene a follow-up international meeting on a political transition in Syria. Argentina's U.N. Ambassador Maria Cristina Perceval, asked Qatar, the lead sponsor, to water down language welcoming the establishment of the Syrian National Coalition,the main opposition group, and to eliminate a reference to "the wide international acknowledgment" that it is the legitimate representative of the Syrian people. She said in a letter, written on behalf of a group of Latin American countries, that they also objected to language welcoming Arab League resolutions on a political resolution ofthe situation in Syria because Latin American countries didn't participate in their adoption. Perceval also demanded that language be inserted "explicitly calling for no further militarization of the conflict." But the Qataris refused to make any of these requested changes, putting support from thisgroup of Latin American countries in doubt. The last Arab-sponsored General Assembly resolution in August was approved by an overwhelming vote of 133-12 with 31 abstentions. It strongly condemned Syria's use of heavy weapons, deplored the Security Council's failure to act, said Syria must take the first steps to stop the violence, and stressed that rapid progress on a political transition represented the "best opportunity"to resolve the crisis peacefully. Diplomats predicted that the resolution beingvoted on Wednesday will get a reduced majority of between 100 and 110 "yes" votes because of concerns about the divided opposition. Using similar language to the August resolution, the proposed new resolution stresses that "rapid progress on a political transition represents the best opportunity" toresolve the Syrian conflict peacefully
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where there are no vetoes, to reflect international dismay at the increasing death toll, now more than 70,000, and the failure to end the more than two-year-old conflict. Unlike Security Council resolutions, which are legally binding, General Assembly resolutions cannot be enforced. But approval of an assembly resolution would counter the paralysis of the deeply divided Security Council, where Syria's allies, Russia and China, have vetoed three Western-backed resolutions aimed at pressuring Assad to endthe violence. Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin has sent letters urging all U.N. members to vote"no" on the new resolution.
He called it "one-sided and biased" as well as"counterproductive" given the understandingreached by Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry in Moscow earlier this month to convene a follow-up international meeting on a political transition in Syria. Argentina's U.N. Ambassador Maria Cristina Perceval, asked Qatar, the lead sponsor, to water down language welcoming the establishment of the Syrian National Coalition,the main opposition group, and to eliminate a reference to "the wide international acknowledgment" that it is the legitimate representative of the Syrian people. She said in a letter, written on behalf of a group of Latin American countries, that they also objected to language welcoming Arab League resolutions on a political resolution ofthe situation in Syria because Latin American countries didn't participate in their adoption. Perceval also demanded that language be inserted "explicitly calling for no further militarization of the conflict." But the Qataris refused to make any of these requested changes, putting support from thisgroup of Latin American countries in doubt. The last Arab-sponsored General Assembly resolution in August was approved by an overwhelming vote of 133-12 with 31 abstentions. It strongly condemned Syria's use of heavy weapons, deplored the Security Council's failure to act, said Syria must take the first steps to stop the violence, and stressed that rapid progress on a political transition represented the "best opportunity"to resolve the crisis peacefully. Diplomats predicted that the resolution beingvoted on Wednesday will get a reduced majority of between 100 and 110 "yes" votes because of concerns about the divided opposition. Using similar language to the August resolution, the proposed new resolution stresses that "rapid progress on a political transition represents the best opportunity" toresolve the Syrian conflict peacefully
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