On
Syria,
Russia Says
Steps
"General," No
Answers on
Kidwa, Rice on
Nowruz
By
Matthew
Russell Lee
UNITED
NATIONS,
March 21, updated
-- After the
modified Syria
Presidential
Statement
was read out
in the UN
Security
Council on
Wednesday
morning, five
Permanent
Representatives
came out to
speak to the
press: UK,
France,
Germany,
Morocco and
then Russia. US
Ambassador
Susan Rice
commented
later, as did
Kofi Annan.
Inner City
Press
asked UK
Ambassador
Lyall Grant,
this month's
president of
the
Council, to
explain the
change in the
draft
Statement from
"further
measures" to
"further
steps," and
the deletion
of
seven day
reporting by
Joint Special
Envoy Kofi
Annan.
Lyall Grant, "I
don’t want to
go into the
negotiations
of PRST."
When Inner
City
Press asked
him about
Russia's
Vitaly
Churkin's
criticism of
the UK
delaying on
the
anti-terrorism
press
statement they
proposed,
Lyall
Grant said, "we
had some
amendments to
the original
Russian draft
of the press
statement.
Those
amendments
were agreed
and the press
statement has
now issued."
Minutes later,
Inner City
Press asked
Churkin the
same two
questions. He
said that
"steps" is
obviously
"more general"
then the term
"further
measures." Russia
subsequently
indicated
that the UK
amendments
were all
agreed to on
Tuesday but
that the UK
still wanted
to delay,
ostensibly to
"get
instructions."
As Indian
Permanent
Representative
Hardeep Singh
Puri told the
Press on
Tuesday, the
draft press
statement was
delayed "for
leverage"
to get the
PRST agreed
to.
Another member
of
the Council
criticized
what the UK
did, telling
Inner City
Press that
"once you
start playing
with the
Council's
condemnation
of
terrorism, it
will happen
more and
more."
Yet
another
Council
diplomat told
Inner City
Press that the
UK's "open"
actions --
actually, in
closed
consultations
-- might give
the impression
that
condemnation
of terrorism
against some
states is no
longer
automatic.
Inner City
Press
asked French
Ambassador
Gerard Araud
how this
Presidential
Statement
could be seen
as
"unambiguously"
supporting the
Arab League
plan,
including
political
transition. He
said that the
Statement
refers to the
General
Assembly
resolution,
which refers
to the Arab
League plan.
He said that
Kofi Annan's
six points are
similar to the
Arab League
plan. But what
about
political
"transition"?
On Tuesday
Inner
City Press
learned of and
reported a
German
sponsored
Arria formula
meeting of the
Council on
March 22 with
the head of
the
International
Commission of
Inquiry on
Syria, Paulo
Pinheiro.
On Wednesday
Inner
City Press
asked Wittig
to confirm it;
he did. Inner
City Press
then
asked why it
had been so
little
publicized.
This Wittig
did not
answer,
ostensibly so
that others
could ask
questions. But
despite
hands
apparently
having been
raised, no
other
questions were
asked.
Morocco's
Ambassador
Loulichki
spoke mostly
in Arabic.
Inner City
Press asked
him about
Syria blocking
Annan's Arab
League
designated
deputy Nassar
Al Kidwa,
which Inner
City Press
reported last
week and
Annan's
spokesman
Ahmad Fawzi
confirmed to
Inner City
Press on
Tuesday.
Loulichki
didn't answer
that question,
though he did
refer to "a
democratic
exit" to the
crisis. Does
that mean exit
of Assad?
From
the UK Mission
transcript:
Inner
City Press:
Can I ask a
question about
the press
statement?
There was some
complaint by
Russia
that...the
linking of the
two. They say
that the press
statement was
a very
straight
forward
condemnation
of terror but
sort of got
swept up....I
guess to get
leverage.
What’s your
response to
that?
Amb Lyall
Grant: We had
some
amendments to
the original
Russian draft
of the press
statement.
Those
amendments
were agreed
and the press
statement has
now issued.
Inner City
Press: Is
there a
difference
between
further steps
and further
measures, and
not reporting
every seven
days in the
PRST?
Amb Lyall
Grant: I don’t
want to go
into the
negotiations
of PRST. The
PRST stands on
its own
merits.
Just
after noon,
Annan through
his spokesman
Fawzi said
that he "is
encouraged by
the united
support of the
Security
Council behind
his efforts
and urges the
Syrian
authorities to
respond
positively."
Footnotes:
It
was notably
that the US
did not speak
at the
stakeout.
There had
been a
briefing for
select UN
scribes set up
at the US
Mission at
9:30 am with
Mike Hammer,
but Inner City
Press is
informed that
it
was canceled.
Hammer will
appear for the
"foreign"
press at
4 pm. At 11 am
Wednesday, one
of Ambassador
Susan Rice's
bodyguards
was just
outside the
Council.
Should we
expect an
appearance?
Let's
see what
happens.
As this went
to
press past 11
am, the
following
quote came in
from
Ambassador
Rice:
“The
United
Nations
Security
Council has
come together
today to
support
Joint Special
Envoy Annan’s
efforts and
his proposal
to the Syrian
regime. While
this is a
modest step,
it is indeed a
step forward
for
the Security
Council
towards a more
unified
approach to
the crisis in
Syria. As the
Council
recognized,
Annan’s
proposal is
the best way
to put an end
to the
violence,
facilitate
much needed
humanitarian
assistance,
and advance a
Syrian-led
political
transition. We
urge
the Syrian
authorities to
respond
swiftly and
positively.”
Others
noted that
while the UK
boycotted
Tuesday
night's
"Nowruz" event
at
the UN because
it was
co-hosted by
Iran, the US
was
represented,
by
Rice's deputy
Rosemary
DiCarlo. At
11:11 am,
Ambassador
Rice arrived
and Inner City
Press asked,
the UK
boycotted but
the US went to
Nowruz. She
told Inner
City Press,
"I've got
enough trouble
without
worrying about
their social
schedule." And
so it goes at
the UN.