Arab League raps Syria again: no call on UN for now

CAIRO,  (Reuters) – The Arab League has urged the  Syrian government to end its violence against protesters and  allow League monitors in the country to work more freely, but  stopped short of asking the U.N. to help.

The arrival last month of the monitors in Syria to judge  whether the government was honouring a pledge to end a crackdown  on a popular revolt has not ended the violence, in which the  United Nations says more than 5,000 people have been killed.

After a progress meeting in Cairo on Sunday, the Arab League  group on Syria said the government had only partly implemented a  promise to stop the crackdown, free those jailed during the  crisis and withdraw its troops from cities.

In its closing communique, the League said it would increase  the number of monitors from the present 165 and give them more  resources, ignoring calls to end what pro-democracy campaigners  say is a toothless mission that buys more time for Syrian  President Bashar al-Assad to suppress opponents.

Arab League officials said the continuation of the mission,  due to make a full report on Jan. 19, depended on the Syrian  government’s commitment to ending violence and honouring its  promises. League foreign ministers will discuss the findings on  Jan. 19-20.

“If the … report comes out saying the violence has not  stopped, the Arab League will have a responsibility to act on  that … We have to be clear and honest with the Syrian people,”  Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani told a  news conference after the meeting.

He did not say what the Arab League might do, but Assad’s  failure to abide by the peace plan resulted in Syria’s  suspension from the 22-member regional body in November.

The Arab plan also called for Assad’s government to permit  peaceful protests, start dialogue with political opponents and  allow foreign media to travel freely to the country. Syria  agreed, but the pledge remains unfulfilled.

Qatar, which chairs the group and has been critical of the  mission’s performance, had proposed inviting U.N. technicians  and human rights experts to help Arab monitors assess whether  Syria was honouring its pledges.

“We have not yet agreed to send individuals,” Sheikh Hamad  said. Asked if this could happen in the future, he said: “it  depends on how events develop.”

The Arab League communique called on the Syrian opposition  to present its political vision for the country’s future, and  asked the League’s secretary general to convene a Syrian  opposition meeting.

PROTESTERS’ ANGER

About 50 protesters gathered outside the Cairo hotel where  the meeting was held, singing: “The people want the president  dead” and “Down, down with Bashar”. Some waved posters showing  Assad as a vampire sucking the Syrian people’s blood.

Syrian opposition activists criticised the Arab League’s  failure to take a firmer line against Assad.

Some Syrian opposition groups hope a failure of the mission  might open the way to foreign military intervention like that  which helped topple Libya’s Muammar Gaddafi last year.

But Arab League Secretary General Nabil Elaraby said that  while the Syrian opposition had asked for the case to be  referred to the U.N. Security Council, there was no  international appetite for military intervention in Syria.

In Syria, security forces and pro-Assad militiamen killed  seven people on Sunday in and around the central city of Homs,  the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

Another opposition organisation, the Local Coordination  Committees, put yesterday’s death toll at 14, including 10 in Homs.

The Free Syrian Army, an armed opposition force composed  mainly of army deserters, has joined the 10-month revolt, which  has turned increasingly violent. The government says  “terrorists” have killed 2,000 members of the security forces  during the uprising.