U.S. calls on Syria to 'stand down' from UN forum
U.S. calls on Syria to 'stand down' from presidency of UN disarmament forum, asks Russia for help
UN chief hopes Syrian leadership won't have 'negative impact'
On
Monday, Syria will assume the presidency of the UN's top
disarmament forum. Above: Syrian ambassador Hussam Edin
Aala, left, with Vladimir Gratchev, representative of
Michael Møller, Secretary-General of the UN Conference on
Disarmament, Geneva, Sept. 3,
2014.
GENEVA, May 25, 2018 –
The U.S. called on Russia to pressure Syria to "stand down"
from the presidency of the UN-backed Conference on
Disarmament which the Assad regime is scheduled to take over
on Monday despite allegedly carrying out numerous deadly
chemical weapons attacks.
UN chief Antonio Guterres,
speaking on disarmament yesterday in Geneva, expressed the hope that Syria's
presidency won't have a "negative impact" on the 65-nation
forum which produced the treaty banning chemical
weapons.
America's bid to block the Assad regime came in
a meeting this week of the disarmament
forum after Syria vigorously defended its presidency and
spoke of "achieving the objectives of the Convention on
Chemical Weapons."
Ambassador Hussam Alaa slammed the UK,
France, and the US for bombing Syria over chemical weapons
attacks, and said that "it is not the Syrian presidency that
could harm this conference, but those who take the floor to
justify aggression against a sovereign state in violation of
international law."
U.S. representative Robert Wood tweeted today that "Monday, May 28, will
be one of the darkest days in the history of the Conference
on Disarmament with Syria beginning its four-week
presidency. The Damascus regime has neither the credibility
nor moral authority to preside over the CD. The
international community must not be silent."
UN
Watch Leads Campaign to Protest Syrian
Presidency
Leading the campaign
against the Assad regime's presidency for the past two
months has been United Nations Watch, a non-governmental
organization based in Geneva, which launched a petition calling on Britain, France,
Germany, Canada and other democracies to instruct their ambassadors to walk out of the
conference during the four weeks of the Syrian
presidency.
The 65-nation Conference on Disarmament, based in
Geneva, has also negotiated the Nuclear Nonproliferation
Treaty, considered the cornerstone of nuclear disarmament
efforts, as well as the convention against biological
weapons.
“Having the Syrian regime of Bashar al-Assad
preside over global chemical and nuclear weapons disarmament
will be like putting a serial rapist in charge of a
women’s shelter,” said Hillel Neuer, executive director
of United Nations Watch, the Geneva based non-governmental
organization.
“The Assad regime’s documented use of
chemical weapons remains the most serious violation of the
Chemical Weapons Convention in the treaty’s twenty-year
history,” said Neuer. “We urge the UN to understand that
at a time when Syria is gassing its own men, women, and
children to death, to see Syria heading the world body that
is supposed to protect these victims will simply shock the
conscience of humanity,” said Neuer.
Under UN rules, the Syrian ambassador to the
forum, Hussam Edin Aala, will help organize the work of the
conference and assist in setting the agenda. Mr. Aala will
exercise all functions of a presiding officer and represent
the body in its relations with states, the General Assembly
and other organs of the United Nations, and with other
international organizations.
While the post is largely
formal, “Syria holding the president’s gavel is liable
to seriously undermine the UN’s credibility, and will send
absolutely the worst message,” said Neuer.
“United
Nations Watch urges the U.S., Britain, France, Germany, and
all other member and observers states to refuse to send
ambassadors to any meeting of this UN forum that is being
chaired by Syria.” The U.S. and Canada pulled out while Iran was chair in 2013,
and should do so again.
What UN Chief Guterres
Should Do
The UN
secretary-general said the post is merely the result of an
automatic rotation, and that the matter can only be
addressed by member states.
Yet actions taken by other
high UN officials prove he can speak out. When Syria was
elected to a UNESCO human rights committee in 2013, the head
of that UN body went on record to say that the election was
wrong. “Given the developments in Syria, the
director-general does not see how this country can
contribute to the work of the committees.”
According to
Neuer, “past precedent shows that UN officials can act as
the world’s moral voice when a UN committee makes obscene
decisions which only cast a shadow on the reputation of the
UN as a whole.”
He regretted attempts by UN officials
to downplay what he described as “a fundamental conflict
of interests” to have Syria as president of a disarmament
forum, “an act liable to be exploited by Syrian
propaganda, as they have done after other UN elections, to legitimize
Assad’s cruel regime.”
“A country that flagrantly
violates the chemical weapons convention, and which was reported to the UN Security Council by
the International Atomic Energy Agency for its covert
construction of a nuclear reactor and found in breach found in breach of the Nonproliferation
Treaty, should be barred from any formal positions in UN
bodies dealing with the such vital matters as biological,
chemical and nuclear weapons disarmament,” said
Neuer.
“The Assad regime simply cannot be a credible
chair of this or any other United Nations body. Syria’s
use of deadly chemical weapons and its illegal pursuit of
nuclear weapons, in breach of its disarmament obligations,
run counter to the objectives and fundamental principles of
the Conference on Disarmament itself. Syria's chairmanship
will only undermine the integrity of both the disarmament
framework and of the United Nations, and no country should
support that."
Syria will assume the presidency of the
Conference on Disarmament on Monday, May 28 and hold it over
four weeks, until June 24.
About the Conference
of Disarmament
The Conference
of Disarmament (CD) reports to the UN General Assembly and
is billed by the UN as “the single multilateral
disarmament negotiating forum of the international
community.”
Established in 1979 after a special UN
General Assembly session, the CD is made up of 65 countries
who have been divided in recent years on key issues.
The
conference and its predecessors have negotiated such major
multilateral arms limitation and disarmament agreements
as:
• Treaty on the Non-Proliferation of Nuclear
Weapons
• Convention on the Prohibition of the
Development, Production and Stockpiling of Bacteriological
(Biological) and Toxin Weapons and on their
Destruction
• Convention on the Prohibition of the
Development, Production, Stockpiling and Use of Chemical
Weapons and on Their Destruction
• Convention on the
Prohibition of Military or Any Other Hostile Use of
Environmental Modification Techniques
• Comprehensive
Nuclear-Test-Ban
Treaty