Syria’s opposition leaders have turned their back on international talks, saying the world’s failure to stop the violence is “shameful”.
In advance of another round of meetings over the crisis – namely, the Friends of Syria meeting in Rome and scheduled talks in Russia and the US – the opposition leaders have said they will boycott international talks until world leaders come up with a concrete agenda.
After missiles killed dozens in Aleppo on Friday, the Syrian National Coalition (SNC) – the most prominent opposition group – released a statement saying the boycott was in protest against the lack of international condemnation of the “crimes committed against the Syrian people”.
“Hundreds of civilians have been killed by Scud missile strikes. Aleppo, the city and the civilisation, is being destroyed systematically,” the statement said.
At a demonstration in the Egyptian capital Cairo on Saturday, Mouaz al-Khatib, the SNC head, said he was sending out “a message of protest to all governments of the world, Arab and non-Arab, that can see how the Syrian people are being killed, while they merely look on”.
‘Savage, aggressive regime’
Speaking to the Dubai-based Al-Aan pan-Arab television in Cairo, Khatib said: “All the administrations of the world can see what is happening. … We cannot visit any country until there is a clear decision on this savage, aggressive regime.”
After missiles killed dozens in Aleppo on Friday, the SNC released a statement saying the move was to protest the lack of international condemnation of the “crimes committed against the Syrian people”.
“Hundreds of civilians have been killed by Scud missile strikes. Aleppo, the city and the civilisation, is being destroyed systematically,” the statement said.
“The Russian leadership especially bears moral and political responsibility for supplying the regime with weapons,” it said, referring to Russia’s status as a leading ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.
“In protest of this shameful international stand, the coalition has decided to suspend its participation in the Rome
conference for the Friends of Syria and decline the invitations to visit Russia and the United States.”
The Friends of Syria is a collection of dozens of countries trying to find a solution to the Syrian crisis.
Al Jazeera’s Nisreen El-Shamayleh, reporting from Antakya in Turkey, said that the SNC felt promises of help from international community has been very slow and that international community was not keeping the promises it made three months ago.
“It is not really turning its back on the international community. It is still calling on the international community to help it with negotiations it wants to start with the Syrian government, she said.
Aleppo attack
At least 29 people were killed and dozens more wounded after rockets hit two eastern districts of Aleppo, according to anti-government activists.
Friday’s assault – involving three surface-to-surface missile strikes – caused several buildings to collapse, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR), a UK-based anti-government rights group.
There were children among the dead, the SOHR said.
In a video posted to YouTube, a massive cloud of dense smoke was seen rising from the neighbourhood at dusk after one of the missiles struck.
Other video showed burning buildings, and people carrying the wounded to ambulances and cars.
Earlier on Friday, the SNC said in Cairo that it was pushing forward with efforts to name a transitional government in the coming days.
Walid al-Bunni, an SNC spokesperson, said that the transitional set-up would control rebel-controlled areas in Syria.
He said that the prime minister would be named on March 2 during a meeting in Istanbul, Turkey, after consultations were held within the opposition.
Bunni said that the SNC was open to a negotiated end to the conflict, but that it would not negotiate with Assad.
Assad and government officials involved in the killing of rebels must step down and face charges, he said.
Al Jazeera
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