(ANSAmed) - PARIS, MAY 30 - Syrian ambassadors to Western
countries have been expelled after the atro++++cious Houla
massacre - in which over 100 died including many children - as
an action of protest against the Syrian regime under Bashar Al
Assad. In a meeting with President Assad in Damascus, UN special
envoy Kofi Annan forcefully demanded that ''courageous steps be
taken - not tomorrow but immediately - in the implementation of
the plan'' for peace. Annan warned that ''this means that all
government and pro-government militias must halt all military
operations.'' And so, international pressure on Assad's regime
has moved up a notch - to the point that White House spokesman
Jay Carney has even said that the United States ''will continue
to work with our allies to isolate Assad''. Carney also noted
that the military option is still a possibility, even though at
the moment it is not the right direction to take. The massacre
of children, a number of observers have noted, may very well end
up being the ''turning point'' in the Syrian crisis.
Yesterday many European countries (including Italy, France,
Germany, Spain and Great Britain) decided to expel in a
coordinated manner Syrian diplomatic representatives, calling
them ''personae non gratae''. The same was done by the United
States, Canada and Australia. In a statement released by
Washington, US State Department spokesperson Victoria Nuland
noted that the Syrian charge d'affaires (the ambassador had
already been summoned to Damascus for consultations) had 72
hours to leave the United States.
At the same time French president Francois Hollande announced
the expulsion of the Syrian ambassador (who will not actually be
leaving the country, since he is also UNESCO ambassador) and the
organisation of the third conference of the Friends of the
Syrian People in early July in Paris. In agreement with the
White House, even Hollande did not rule out military
intervention against Assad's regime. ''So long as it is done in
compliance with international law and with the backing of the UN
Security Council,'' he noted. Assad ''is the assassin of his
people. He must step down,'' said French Foreign Minister
Laurent Fabius, interviewed by the daily paper Le Monde. Italy's
Foreign Minister Giulio Terzi instead wrote on Twitter that
''after the horror of Houla'', the expelling of Syrian
ambassadors sends a ''strong and unequivocal message to the
Syrian regime, that the violence must cease.''
''One thing is clear, and not only from the Houla massacre:
Syria has no future with Assad. One must make way for peaceful
change,'' said German Foreign Minister Guido Westerwelle. His
Spanish counterpart, José Manuel García-Margallo, instead laid
blame on the ''unacceptable repression'' by the Syrian regime,
and once again urged Damascus to ''take advantage of the
opportunity offered by the Annan plan.'' On a harshly-worded and
important speech, Turkey's conservative Islamic Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned Assad that the international
community's patience ''has limits''. In speaking before his AKP
party's parliamentary group, Erdogan spoke out against the
''inhuman massacre'' of Houla, which the UN yesterday blamed on
pro-Assad militias. The Turkish prime minister denounced the
regime's ''cruelty'', warning that ''there is a limit to
patience and, thank God, also the patience of the UN Security
Council''. Meanwhile, the Syrian National Council (SNC), the
main opposition movement against the Syrian regime, welcomed the
expelling of diplomats, asking the Security Council to authorise
the use of force against the regime. The latter is for the time
being unable to be put into action due to vetoes by China and
Russia, Damascus's allies. Most Western countries had already
closed their diplomatic offices in Damascus during the
repression in Homs by Syrian pro-government troops.
In addition to the Houla massacre - with survivor statements
gathered by the UN reporting true 'summary executions' -
repression by the Syrian regime continues to reap victims on a
daily basis despite the entering into force (theoretically) on
April 12 of the 'ceasefire' which was part of the Annan plan.
Over the past 14 months the violence has caused the death of
over 13,000 people, including 1,800 in April, according to the
figures released by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
(ANSAmed).