DAMASCUS SYRIA’s new opposition chief on Tuesday called on world powers to arm President Bashar al Assad’s foes, as Arab and EU leaders urged his coalition to seek broader support inside the wartorn country.
While fierce clashes raged across the country claiming 41 lives, France and the USA joined Arab states of the Gulf in pushing for international recognition of the newly-formed opposition alliance.
France recognises the newly formed National Coalition of the Syrian opposition as the sole representative of Syria’s people, President Francois Hollande said in Paris on Tuesday.
The United States has declared its backing for the coalition, calling the newly formed body a “legitimate representative” of the Syrian people, while Damascus ally Moscow has urged the opposition to drop its refusal to negotiate with the Assad regime.
National Coalition leader Ahmed Moaz al Khatib urged world powers to arm rebels with “specialised weapons” as they desperately needed arms to “cut short the suffering of the Syrians and their bloodshed.” His organisation, formed on Sunday after marathon meetings in Qatar, was representative of most opposition groups, he also said.
“Many groups have joined. Some have reservations, and we are in touch with everyone. The vast majority has joined. It is the strongest coalition and represents Syria internally,” he said in a telephone interview in Cairo.
Earlier on Tuesday, Khatib met French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius at a Cairo hotel.
Fabius and European Union chief Catherine Ashton have expressed support for the National Coalition but have stopped short of formal recognition, a move that could facilitate more aid to the rebels. the French minister later said his country would play a leading role in seeking recognition for the National Coalition.
“Our hope is that the different countries recognise the Syrian National Coalition as the legitimate representative of the Syrian people... France’s role is to make that hope possible,” he told reporters in Cairo.
European Union foreign ministers meeting in Cairo welcomed the bloc and urged it to bring in more regime dissenters.
“The opposition has taken a huge step forward,” said Fabius, who also met with George Sabra, head of the Syrian National Council (SNC), the opposition group that finally agreed to join the wider, more representative bloc.
The six-nation Gulf Cooperation Council has recognised the National Coalition as “the Syrian people’s legitimate representative.” The 22-member League, however, has stopped short of granting the bloc full recognition, stating only that it saw the alliance as “the legitimate representative of the Syrian opposition”.
It called on the rest of the opposition to join.
On the ground, fierce battles and army shelling in Damascus province on Tuesday killed at least 41 people, most of them civilians, while warplanes again bombed Ras al-Ain, a strategic town on the Turkish border, a watchdog said.
The fighting in the Eastern Ghuta area east of Damascus came after rebels launched an attack on public buildings in the area, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The area is a hotbed of insurgent groups, and has been subjected to a fierce campaign by Assad’s forces to stamp out both peaceful activism and armed rebellion since early in the 20-month revolt.
The army used tanks to shell several towns east of Damascus, including Harasta, Zabadani and Irbin, killing at least seven civilians including an unknown number of women and children, the Observatory said.
The watchdog also reported fresh bombings by warplanes of Ras al-Ain, in northeastern Syria.
The air strikes have sent a new wave of civilians pouring into Turkey, adding to the 9,000 refugees who fled late last week when rebels overran the town, an AFP photographer said.
In other violence, the army shelled rebel positions in the southern province of Daraa, in the central province of Homs, in Idlib in the northwest and in the northern city of Aleppo, said the Observatory.
At least 62 people were killed across Syria — 28 civilians, 11 soldiers and 23 rebels — said the Observatory, which relies for its information on a network of activists, lawyers and medics.
The watchdog has given an overall death toll of more than 37,000 since the revolt broke out in March 2011.
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