Syria on Monday warned Turkey against
"inflaming" unrest in the country, where more than 3,000 people are
estimated to have died in six months of protests against President Bashar
al-Assad.
Buthaina Shaaban, media adviser to the Syrian president, who
has repeatedly promised reforms, told reporters in Kuala Lumpur that
"armed gangs" were responsible for the violence.
"We had the best relations as you know and therefore we
expected Turkey to support the march for pluralism and democracy in Syria
rather than give statements that are helping to inflame the situation in Syria
and to support the armed gangs there," she said.
Shaaban is touring Malaysia and Indonesia -- two major
Southeast Asian Muslim countries -- to seek international support for Assad's
regime.
Kuala Lumpur has cultivated close ties with the Assad
government, with some 220 Malaysian students studying in Syria. Both countries
are members of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference (OIC).
But Turkey, formerly an Assad ally, has kept constant pressure
on Damascus by hosting gatherings of Syrian dissidents and repeatedly calling
on the regime to introduce reforms.
Turkey has expressed frustration with Assad for failing to
listen to the Syrian people, whose almost daily pro-democracy rallies have been
met with violent repression, at a cost of more than 3,000 lives according to
the UN.
Last month, Turkey stopped a shipload of weapons destined for
Syria and Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said last week that his
government would announce sanctions against its neighbour.
Shaaban also said "some countries" were arming and
financing armed groups to incite sectarian violence to split the country.
"The problem we are facing is that there are other
parties who are financing and arming groups in Syria, that are introducing
sectarian violence... in an attempt to try and tear the country apart,"
she said.
Source : AFP
No comments:
Post a Comment