Qatar proposed this draft resolution in the UN General Assembly, diplomats said. It might be voted on later this month.
Proposed
Draft General Assembly Resolution on the Situation in Syria
Agenda
item 33
Prevention
of armed conflict
The
situation in the Syrian Arab Republic
PP1
Recalling
its
resolutions 66/176 of 19 December 2011, 66/253 A of 16 February 2012
66/253 B of 3 August 2012, and 67/183 of 20 December 2012, and Human
Rights Council resolutions S 16/1 of 29 April 2011, S 17/1 of
23 August 2011,3 S 18/1 of 2 December 2011, 19/1 of 1 March
2012, 19/22 of 23 March 2012,5 S 19/1 of 1 June 2012, 20/22 of
6 July 2012, 21/26 of 28 September 2012, and 22/31 of 22 March 2013,
PP2
Recalling
also Security
Council resolutions 2042 (2012) of 14 April 2012 and 2043 (2012) of
21 April 2012,
PP3
Recalling
further all
resolutions of the League of Arab States relating to the situation in
the Syrian Arab Republic, in particular resolution 7595 of 6 March
2013, in which the League reviewed the very serious situation in the
Syrian Arab Republic due to the escalating violence and killings in
most of the Syrian territory, and the continuation of grave
violations of human rights by the Syrian regime using heavy weapons,
warplanes and Scud missiles to bomb neighbourhoods and populated
areas, which has seriously increased the number of victims, caused
human displacement inside the Syrian Arab Republic and an influx of
thousands of Syrians to the neighbouring countries fleeing violence,
which targets even children and women who have been subjected to
frightful massacres, threatening thus to lead to the collapse the
Syrian State, and endangers the security, peace and stability of the
region,
PP4
Recalling
also all
relevant resolutions of the Organization of Islamic Cooperation on
the situation in the Syrian Arab Republic, in particular resolution
2/4 EX (IS) of 15 August 2012 in which the Organization called for
the immediate implementation of the transitional plan and the
development of a peaceful mechanism that would allow the building of
a new Syrian State based on pluralism and a democratic and civilian
system, where there would be equality on the basis of law,
citizenship and fundamental freedoms,
PP5
Expressing
grave
concern regarding the escalation of violence in the Syrian Arab
Republic, in particular the continued widespread and systematic gross
violations of human rights and violations of international
humanitarian law, including those involving the continued use of
heavy weapons and aerial bombardments, such as the indiscriminant use
of ballistic missiles and cluster munitions, by the Syrian
authorities against the Syrian population, and the failure of the
Government of the Syrian Arab Republic to protect its population,
PP6
Expressing
outrage
at the death of more than 70,000 people in the Syrian Arab Republic,
PP7
Recalling
the
statements made by the United Nations High Commissioner for Human
Rights before the Human Rights Council and the Security Council that
crimes against humanity are likely to have been committed in the
Syrian Arab Republic, and noting the repeated encouragement by the
High Commissioner to the Security Council to refer the situation to
the International Criminal Court,
PP8
Deeply
regretting the
lack of cooperation of the Government of the Syrian Arab Republic
with the independent international commission of inquiry, in
particular the persistent denial of access to members of the
commission to the Syrian Arab Republic,
PP9
Expressing
concern at
the occurrence of grave violations against children in the Syrian
Arab Republic, that children were among the victims of military
operations carried out by Government forces, including the Syrian
armed forces, intelligence forces and shabbiha militias, and that
children were victims of killing and maiming, arbitrary arrest,
detention, torture, and ill treatment, including sexual violence, and
were used as human shields, [PP10 of A/RES/67/183] as well as
unlawfully recruited and used in the conduct of hostilities,
PP10
Expressing
concern
at the vulnerable situation of women in this context, including being
subjected to discrimination, sexual and other physical abuse,
violation of their privacy and arbitrary arrest and detention in
raids, including to force their male relatives to surrender,
recalling
that
such acts of sexual and gender-based violence could amount to war
crimes and crimes against humanity [SG report on sexual violence],
underlining
the
importance of preventing all sexual violence and violence based on
gender, and welcoming
the
intent of the Special Representative of the Secretary General for
Sexual Violence in Armed Conflict to visit the Syrian Arab Republic
to investigate these violations and abuses,
PP11
Deploring
the
further deterioration of the humanitarian situation and the failure
to ensure the safe and timely provision of humanitarian assistance to
all areas affected by the fighting,
PP12
Deploring
also
the failure of the Syrian authorities to release all arbitrarily
detained persons and grant access to detention centers to relevant
humanitarian organizations with a view toward ensuring humane
treatment of detainees,
PP13
Expressing
deep concern at
the more than one million refugees and millions of internally
displaced persons fleeing as a result of the extreme violence,
PP14
Welcoming
the
efforts by neighboring countries and other countries in the
region to host Syrian refugees while acknowledging the socioeconomic
consequences of the presence of large-scale refugee populations in
these countries, notably Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey, and Iraq,
PP15
Expressing
its
determination to seek ways and means to provide protection to the
Syrian civilian population,
PP16
Expressing
grave
concern at the threat by the Syrian authorities to use chemical or
biological weapons, as well as at allegations of reported use of such
weapons, and welcoming
the
Secretary-General’s investigation into all allegations of
their use in the Syrian Arab Republic,
PP17
Stressing
that
rapid progress on a political transition represents the best
opportunity to resolve the situation in the Syrian Arab Republic
peacefully, and reaffirming
its
support for the engagement of the Secretary-General and all
diplomatic efforts aimed at reaching a political solution to the
crisis, reaffirming also the role of regional and subregional
organizations in the maintenance of international peace and security,
as set out in Chapter VIII of the Charter
PP18
Welcoming
the
relevant resolutions of the League of Arab States to address the
situation in the Syrian Arab Republic,
PP19
Recalling
also all
meetings of the group of friends of the Syrian people, in particular
the fourth Ministerial Meeting held in Marrakech on 12 December 2012,
where the participants acknowledged the National Coalition for Syrian
Revolutionary and opposition Forces as the legitimate representative
of the Syrian people,
PP20
Reaffirming
its
strong commitment to the sovereignty, independence, unity and
territorial integrity of the Syrian Arab Republic and to the
principles of the Charter of the United Nations,
PP21
Reaffirming
the
purposes and principles of the Charter, the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights and relevant international human rights law, including
the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights, and
recalling the obligation of the Syrian Arab Republic to protect human
rights and fundamental freedoms,
INTERNATIONAL
HUMANITARIAN LAW AND HUMAN RIGHTS
1.
Strongly
condemns the
continued escalation in the use by the Syrian authorities of heavy
weapons, including indiscriminate shelling from tanks and aircrafts,
as well as the use of ballistic missiles, cluster munitions and other
indiscriminate weapons, against population centres;
2.
Strongly
condemns all
violations of international humanitarian law and the continued
widespread and systematic gross violations of human rights and
fundamental freedoms by the Syrian authorities and the Government
affiliated shabbiha militias, such as the use of heavy weapons,
aerial bombardments and force against civilians, massacres, arbitrary
executions, extrajudicial killings, the killing and persecution of
protestors, human rights defenders and journalists, arbitrary
detention, enforced disappearances, violations of the right of the
child, including unlawful recruitment and use in the conduct of
hostilities, unlawful interference with access to medical treatment,
torture, systematic sexual violence, including rape in detention, and
ill treatment, including against children, as well as any human
rights abuses by armed opposition groups;
3.
Condemns
also all violence,
irrespective of where it comes from, and Calls upon all parties to
put an end to all forms of violence, including terrorist acts and
acts of violence or intimidation that may foment sectarian tensions,
and to comply strictly with their obligations under international
law, including international humanitarian law;
4.
Demands
the
Syrian authorities immediately put an end to all violations of
international humanitarian law, including attacks against civilians,
end immediately all violations of international human rights law, and
meet its responsibility to protect the population and to fully comply
with their obligations under applicable international law, including
international law applicable to the rights and protection of women
and girls as well as the Convention on the Right of the child;
5.
Demands
the
Syrian authorities to release immediately all persons arbitrarily
detained, including the members of the Syrian Centre for Media and
Freedom of Expression, to publish a list of all detention facilities,
to ensure that conditions of detention comply with applicable
international law and to immediately allow access of independent
monitors to all detention facilities;
6.
Demands
that
the Syrian authorities grant the commission of inquiry and
individuals working on its behalf immediate, full and unfettered
entry and access to all areas of the Syrian Arab Republic, and
demands also that all parties cooperate fully with the commission of
inquiry in the performance of its mandate to investigate all alleged
violations of international human rights law since March 2011;
7.
Stresses again the
importance of ensuring accountability and the need to end impunity
and hold to account those responsible for serious violations of
international humanitarian law and serious violations and abuses of
international human rights law, including those that may amount to
war crimes and crimes against humanity;
8.
Reaffirms
that
the Syrian people, on the basis of broad, inclusive and credible
consultations, should determine, within the framework provided by
international law, the process and mechanisms to achieve justice,
reconciliation, truth and accountability for gross violations, as
well as reparations and effective remedies for victims, whilst
underlining the relevance of referrals to the appropriate
international criminal justice mechanism under appropriate
circumstances;
9.
Encourages
the
Security Council to consider appropriate measures in this regard;
10.
Demands
that
the Syrian authorities strictly observe their obligations under
international law with respect to chemical and biological weapons,
including Security Council resolution 1540 (2004) and the Protocol
for the Prohibition of the Use in War of Asphyxiating, Poisonous or
Other Gases, and of Bacteriological Methods of Warfare, signed at
Geneva on 17 June 1925 and further demands that the Syrian
authorities refrain from using, or transferring to non-State actors,
any chemical and biological weapons, or any related material, and
that the Syrian authorities meet their obligations to account for and
to secure all chemical and biological weapons and any related
material;
11.
Further
demands that
the Syrian authorities provide full and unfettered access to the
Secretary-General’s investigation into all alleged use of chemical
weapons and calls
on
all parties to cooperate with the investigation;
POLITICAL
TRANSITION
12.
Reiterates
its
call for an inclusive Syrian-led political transition to a
democratic, pluralistic political system, in which citizens are equal
regardless of their affiliations or ethnicities or beliefs, including
through the commencement of a serious political dialogue between
credible, empowered, and mutually acceptable interlocutors
representing the Syrian authorities and the Syrian opposition;
13.
Welcomes
the
establishment of the National Coalition of the Syrian Revolution and
Opposition Forces on 11 November 2012 in Doha, State of Qatar, notes
the wide international acknowledgement of the Coalition as the
legitimate representative of the Syrian people, and welcomes
the
communiqué issued by the Coalition on February 18 and 22, 2013,
which endorsed the principle of a political transition leading to a
civil democratic, and pluralistic Syria, where all citizens are equal
regardless of gender, religion, or ethnicity;
14.
Welcomes
the
efforts of the League of Arab States towards a political resolution
of the situation in the Syrian Arab Republic and supports
all relevant
League of Arab States resolutions;
15.
Demands,
in this regard, that all Syrian parties work with the Office of the
Joint Special Representative of the United Nations and the League of
Arab States to Syria to implement rapidly the transition plan set
forth in the final communiqué issued by the Action Group for Syria
on 30 June 2012, in a way that marks a clean break with the past,
assures the safety of all in an atmosphere of stability and calm,
notably through the establishment of a consensus transitional
governing body with full executive powers in which all functions of
the Presidency and Government, including those pertaining to
military, security, and intelligence issues, are transferred to this
body, a review of the Constitution on the basis of an inclusive
national dialogue, and free and fair multiparty elections held in the
framework of this new constitutional order;
16.
Requests
the
Secretary-General to provide support and assistance to the
implementation of the transition plan set forth in the final
communiqué of the Action Group for Syria, and encourages
Member
States to provide active support in this regard;
17.
Requests
that
the Secretary-General, working in close co-ordination with
international financial institutions, relevant regional and
international organizations, including League of Arab States, and the
legitimate representatives of the Syrian people, initiate planning to
assist and support the transition by providing support to Syrian-led
plans;
HUMANITARIAN
ISSUES
18.
Deplores
the
deteriorating humanitarian situation and the failure to ensure safe
and timely provision of humanitarian assistance to all areas affected
by the fighting;
19.
Reiterates
its call
upon the
Syrian authorities to immediately and fully implement the agreed
humanitarian response plan, and for all parties to the conflict to
grant immediate, safe, full and unimpeded access of
humanitarian personnel to all populations in need of assistance in
all parts of Syria and calls upon those parties to cooperate fully
with the United Nations and relevant humanitarian organizations to
facilitate the provision of humanitarian assistance through the most
effectives routes;
20.
Calls on the Syrian authorities to provide authorization for
cross-border humanitarian operations as an urgent priority, and
encourages all parties in Syria to facilitate the delivery of
assistance across conflict lines, in order to implement fully the
Syria Humanitarian Assistance Response plan
21.
Strongly
condemns all
attacks and threats of violence against humanitarian and UN
personnel, as well as medical facilities and vehicles, as well as the
use of medical civilian facilities, including hospitals, for armed
purposes, and calls for all medical facilities to be free of weapons,
including heavy weapons, consistent with applicable international
law;
22.
Strongly
condemning the
shelling as well as the shooting by the Syrian armed forces into
neighbouring countries, which led to casualties and injuries of the
civilians of those countries as well as of Syrian refugees, and
underlines
that
such incidents violated international law, stress the grave threat of
the crisis in the Syrian Arab Republic on the security of its
neighbours and on regional peace and stability, as well as its grave
implications for international peace and security, and calls
upon the
Syrian government to respect the sovereignty of neighboring states
and meet its international obligations in this regard;
[23.
Express
grave
concern at the increasing numbers of refugees and internally
displaced persons and as a result of the ongoing violence, which
could undermine the capacities of the neighboring countries in
providing the Syrian refugees with adequate humanitarian needs]
[24
Reiterates
its
appreciation of the significant efforts that have been made by
neighboring countries and the countries of the region to assist those
who have fled across the borders of the Syrian Arab Republic as a
consequence of the violence, and urges all relevant United Nations
agencies, in particular the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Refugees, and other donors and humanitarian actors
to provide urgent and coordinated support to Syrian Refugees and
their host countries;]
25.
Welcomes
the
Government of Kuwait’s hosting of the January 30 pledging
conference for the UN Joint Appeal;
26
. Urges
the
international community to provide urgent financial support to the
host countries to enable them to respond to the growing humanitarian
needs of Syrian refugees, while emphasizing the principle of burden
sharing,
27.
Urges
also all
donors to provide expeditiously financial support to the Office for
the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs of the Secretariat and
international humanitarian organizations, as requested in the
humanitarian appeals issued by the United Nations system and the host
countries, so that they can implement more actively the humanitarian
response plan inside the country,
28.
Calls
upon
Member States to provide all support to the Syrian people, and
encourages Member States to contribute to the United Nations
humanitarian response efforts;
29.
Requests
the Secretary-General to report within thirty days on the
implementation of the present resolution.
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Maybe we were not rich people..But we did not need any one...
ReplyDeleteWe were eating what we were implanting... and wearing what we were weaving
We had free hospitals, free schools and free universities...There was a law protecting everyone..
We were building Syria ourselves ... we were not a closed society .... Church bells were ringing while prayers of mosques were reciting
We have been blessed with the freedom even more than it should be...
We are proud of our roots of civilization ...And we were keeping this civilization.
They lie when they claim that Syria was against freedom
Is what they are doing now is really freedom?!
They accuse us that we are Shabiha!!
Are all those millions supporting president Shabiha!!??
Do they believe that we are defending a particular regime? or defending Syria?
Syrian Arab army is protecting Syria from becoming a Salafi state ... and the leader of this army is the President of the Republic "President Bashar al-Assad", so for this reason, we support President Assad
We-through this decision- are defending Syria..
Only our sole sin is that we did not allow USA to control our national decision..
We are not radical, nor the axis of evil... but we do not want to be affiliated to any one ...
They did not leave us alone...They were always trying to impose their will on us.
We did not accept to submit to their control...
And now we are paying the tax..!!
There is no revolution in Syria, but It's a real terrorism unprecedented in the history !!
It is the tax we are paying now !!