BESIDES adding to the Baathist regime`s regional and international
isolation, the suspension of Syria`s membership by the Organisation of
Islamic Conference on Wednesday is unlikely to have much effect on the
situation in the Levant if the aim is peace. The 57-member bloc coupled
the suspension with a call for the development of a peaceful mechanism
that would build `a new Syrian state based on pluralism` and a
`democratic and civilian system` ideals that are in keeping with the
spirit of the Arab Spring. However, ignoring the plea by Pakistan,
Algeria and Kazakhstan that the insurgents be also blamed for the
bloodshed, the 57member body`s final statement said the `principal
responsibility` for the fighting lay with the government of President
Bashar Al-Assad. The statement coincided with a UN report which said
there were `reasonable grounds` to believe that both government forces
and the rebels had committed war crimes and `gross violations` of human
rights, including `unlawful killing, torture, arbitrary arrest and
detention, sexual violence, pillaging and destructionof property`.
Unless
there is an agreement on a ceasefire, the Syrian conflict, which has
led to 20,000 dead, could expand. Lebanon is already in a state of
tension and fear, with reports that four Arab countries have asked their
nationals to leave the country following a string of abductions of some
Sunnis by a Shia group.
The OIC and the Arab League, which
suspended Syria`s membership last year, ought to have a uniform policy
on dissent in Muslim countries. Their attitudes towards Bahrain, for
instance, are in sharp contrast with their Syria policies. While in the
former case the Gulf Cooperation Council sent troops to crush the
uprising and save the monarchy, in the case of Libya and Syria they have
pursued an active regime-change strategy. What happens if tomorrow
there is a democratic stir in Arab monarchies, some of which have not
given their people even a semblance of constitutional rule? The Syrian
situation deserves to be addressed with all sincerity, but as Pakistan`s
f oreign minister said at the recent Tehran moot, moves that could lead
to foreign intervention need to be avoided.
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