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EU sanctions Syrian President Bashar Assad

France urges Quartet Middle East peace meeting
Paris (AFP) May 23, 2011 - France called Monday for a meeting of the diplomatic Quartet to kickstart peace talks between Israel and the Palestinians.

"We are calling for a meeting of the Quartet to be held as soon as possible" at the level of foreign ministers and high representatives and the UN secretary general, Bernard Valero, French foreign ministry spokesman, told reporters.

The meeting could produce "a declaration specifying the parameters of a peace agreement which could serve as the basis for direct negotiations between the parties to resume," he added.

The Quartet groups the European Union, Russia, the United Nations and the United States.

Peace talks hosted by the United States last year broke down in disagreement over Israeli settlement activity. The Palestinians have set a target of having a Palestinian state recognised at the UN General Assembly in September.

France has taken the lead in recent weeks in pushing to meet the September deadline, hinting it may recognise an independent Palestinian state this year if peace talks are not back on track by then.

US President Barack Obama last week called for an Israeli-Palestinian peace based on their pre-1967 borders. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu rejected that but later softened his tone, saying he shared Obama's vision for peace.

France hosts the annual summit of the Group of Eight world powers on Thursday and Friday. Asked whether the Quartet would meet on the sidelines of that summit, Valero said it was up to the members to decide.

by Staff Writers
Brussels (UPI) May 23, 2011
The European Union Monday followed the U.S. example and for the first time imposed sanctions on Syrian President Bashar Assad in a bid to stop the violence against protesters.

EU foreign ministers meeting in Brussels also agreed to sanction nine of Assad's closest aides with travel bans and asset freezes, the BBC reports.

Targeting Assad "is the right thing to do," British Foreign Secretary William Hague was quoted as saying by news Web site EUobserver. "The repression in Syria continues and it is important to see the right of peaceful protest, the release of prisoners and taking the path of reform, not repression."

Brussels two weeks ago agreed to sanctions against 13 senior figures linked to the violence in Syria, a list that didn't include Assad. The Syrian leader had been seen as a potential reformer in the Middle East but is becoming increasingly isolated.

Human rights groups say more than 850 people have been killed and thousands arrested in the crackdown on dissidents, who have been taking the streets in several Syrian cities since March. The regime has dispatched the military to dissident hot spots, with reports that security forces shot dozens of unarmed civilians.

The Syrian government accuses armed criminals of sparking riots, saying they had killed more than 100 security personnel. In comments to the al-Watan newspaper, Assad admitted that the security services had made mistakes in handling the demonstrations because they were inexperienced.

After the United States last week imposed sanctions on the Syrian president, European leaders, including Hague and German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle, came forward speaking in favor of following the U.S. example.

The U.S. sanctions meant that Assad became the third leader after Libya's Moammar Gadhafi and Alexander Lukashenko of Belarus to be directly targeted by the United States.

"President Assad now has a choice," U.S. President Barack Obama said last week in a widely awaited speech on the uprisings in North Africa and the Middle East. "He can lead that transition or get out of the way. The Syrian government must stop shooting demonstrators and allow peaceful protests."

Meanwhile in Libya, another country gripped by a pro-democracy revolution, the European Union's foreign policy chief, Catherine Ashton, Sunday opened an EU mission in Benghazi, a rebel stronghold.

"Gadhafi should leave and should allow the people to have the government in the future that they wish," she said after opening the three-person mission and talks with leaders from the Transitional National Council.

Her spokesman Michael Mann told the EUobserver that the rebels asked Ashton for money. "It's important for them to pay their people, to stay solvent," Mann said.



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