"ملايين السوريين" يحتشدون اليوم الأحد في الساحات العامة "تنديدا ورفضا لقرار جامعة الدول العربية حول تعليق عضوية سوريا فيها".
In a statement issued on
Wednesday, the government considered the AL resolution as “unprecedented” in the
League’s history “for it blatantly violates the AL Charter and its statutes and
the rules of the joint Arab action.”
The statement slammed the
resolution for targeting “Syria’s role, position and approach of resistance,”
lashing out at the AL resolutions “which have contributed to increasing the
bloodshed in Syria, encouraging terrorism and terrorists and hindering the
latest real efforts exerted by the countries and parties which care for Syria to
find a political solution.”
The statement decried the AL for
having gone too far to “give Syria’s seat at the (Arab) summit to an
illegitimate party and raise a flag other than the Syrian national flag in a
flagrant violation of the AL Charter and its statutes towards a founding
member.”
The government reiterated that
the AL resolution is “a dangerous precedent that’s destructive to the League
making it lose the credibility it has left and taking it off its track.”
It warned that the AL resolution
constitutes “a threat to the Arab regime” as other countries will be targeted
tomorrow in the same way Syria is being targeted now.
The government’s statement said
the most dangerous about the AL approach is that “it consolidated subordination
and submission to the carrot-and-stick policy followed by some countries,
particularly Qatar.”
“With its resolution, the Doha
Summit has encouraged the approach of violence, extremism and terrorism that
poses a threaten not only to Syria but also to all of the Arab nation and the
world as a whole,” said the government.
It stressed that the AL
resolution “provides a false cover to some countries which have publically
announced their support to terrorism in Syria and offering of money and arms to
the terrorist groups, including those with links to al-Qaeda.”
“This leads to putting an end to
any role the Arab League could play in solving the crisis in Syria by political
means and makes (the Arab League) part of the crisis and not part of the
solution,” said the statement.
The government reiterated its
warning that “those countries which play with fire through arming, funding,
training and harboring terrorists won’t be safe when this fire stretches to
them.”
It stressed that Syria will
continue work to establish security and stability, protect the homeland and
Syrian citizens and combat terrorism in preservation of its independence,
sovereignty and unity.
The government concluded its
statement by stressing that “Syria completely rejects the Doha summit
resolutions on Syria and all dangerous repercussions that could result from
them, and keeps its right to take whatever measures it sees suitable in defense
of its sovereignty and the interests of its people.”
H. Said
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