Assad opponent Qatar says will not normalise ties with Syria


Syria was suspended from the Arab League in 2011 after the country's president ordered a brutal crackdown on a pro-democracy uprising, which spiralled into a conflict that has killed more than 500,000 people, displaced millions, and drawn in foreign powers. – EPA pic, May 8, 2023.

QATAR, an outspoken opponent of President Bashar al-Assad, said yesterday it would not normalise relations with the Syrian government despite its readmission to the Arab League.

The Gulf emirate has long argued against renewing ties with Syria but fell in with the unanimous consensus at an Arab League foreign ministers’ meeting in Cairo earlier yesterday.

The Arab bloc ended a more than decade-long suspension of Syria.

Qatar’s position on “normalisation with the Syrian regime has not changed,” said foreign ministry spokesman Majid Muhammad Al-Ansari.

He told the state Qatar News Agency that the government would not be “an obstacle” to the Arab move but any individual normalisation would be linked to political progress that “fulfills the aspirations of the brotherly Syrian people.”

Assad’s government must “address the roots of the crisis that led to its boycott, and to take positive steps towards addressing the issues of the Syrian people,” the spokesman added.

Syria was suspended from the Arab League in 2011 after Assad ordered a brutal crackdown on a pro-democracy uprising, which spiralled into a conflict that has killed more than 500,000 people, displaced millions, and drawn in foreign powers.

While Syria’s frontlines have mostly quietened, large parts of the country’s north remain outside government control, and no political solution has yet been reached to the 12-year-old conflict.

Ahmed Aboul Gheit, head of the 22-member Arab League, said Syria’s return to the body is “the beginning… not the end of the issue”, he added, noting it was up to individual countries to decide whether to resume ties with Damascus.

Qatar has given significant support to Syrian opposition groups which have taken over the Syrian embassy in Doha.

Even as other Arab countries moved toward renewing ties with Assad’s government, the Qatari spokesman condemned to the Qatari media what he called “crimes” by the Damascus government and added that “We need a real price to be paid to the Syrian people.” – AFP, May 8, 2023.


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