Syrian opposition leader resigns, lashing out at West
Syria’s opposition has been thrown into disarray after its moderate leader resigned, blaming a lack of Western support in the two-year struggle to topple President Bashar Al-Assad.
A Syrian man and boy run from fumes as a street covered with uncollected garbage is fumigated in Aleppo on March 24, 2013. Photo: AFP/Getty Images
By Robert Tait
5:47PM GMT 24 Mar 2013
Ahmed Moaz al-Khatib, the head of the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, said he was quitting so he could work with more “freedom”.
Complicating matters further, the National Coalition last night said it refused the resignation, issuing a statement saying they wanted Mr al-Khatib to go back to work. It was unclear whether he would go back to running the group or not.
His resignation came days after fellow opposition activists assailed him for offering Mr Assad a negotiated deal before forming a provisional government that undercut his authority.
The development threatens to destabilise the national coalition just two days before an Arab League summit at which heads of state prepare to award it Syria’s vacant seat.
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Mouaz al-Khatib. Picture: AP
Mr Khatib, a former preacher in Damascus’ Umayyad Mosque who endured several spells in jail in Syria, made his disillusionment plain in an announcement on Facebook.
He suggested that the West had not provided the opposition with insufficient backing to fight Mr Assad’s forces in a two-year civil war that has cost an estimated 70,000 lives.
“I announce my resignation from the National Coalition, so that I can work with a freedom that cannot possibly be had in an official institution,” he said. “For the past two years, we have been slaughtered by an unprecedentedly vicious regime, while the world has looked on. I had made a promise to our great people that I would resign if any red lines were crossed.”
He added: “All the destruction of Syria’s infrastructure, the detention of tens of thousands of people, the forced flight of hundreds of thousands and other forms of suffering have been insufficient for the international community to take a decision to allow the people to defend themselves.”
Western aid for the rebels has been limited predominantly to “non-lethal assistance”, with Britain and France left frustrated by the rest of the European Union in attempts to relax an arms embargo for the opposition.
Mr Khatib’s decision coincided with a plea by John Kerry, the US secretary of state, for Iraq to stop allowing Iranian planes to use its airspace to transport arms to support Mr Assad, Tehran’s close ally.
“Anything that supports President Assad is problematic,” Mr Kerry said during a surprise visit to Baghdad after meeting Nouri al-Maliki, the Iraqi prime minister. “I made it very clear to the prime minister that the overflights from Iran ... are in fact helping to sustain President Assad and his regime.”
Mr Kerry said Mr Khatib’s resignation was “not a surprise”, adding: “It is almost inevitable in a transition.”
Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani, Qatar’s foreign minister as well as its prime minister, urged Mr Khatib to reconsider.
“We are very sorry for this, and I hope he reviews his resignation,” he said in Doha.
Opposition insiders said Mr Khatib was left weakened last week when the coalition chose Ghassan Hitto, a pro-Islamist technocrat backed by Qatar and the Muslim Brotherhood, as a provisional prime minister in charge of forming a government.
Mr Khatib had argued that not enough groundwork had been done to form a government. The appointment of Mr Hitto was reckoned to have undermined moderates and strengthened the position of Jihadist salafists fighting Mr Assad’s regime.
“Basically Qatar and the Brotherhood forced Al-Khatib out,” Fawaz Tello, an independent opposition campaigner said. “In Al-Khatib they had a figure who was gaining popularity inside Syria but he acted too independently for their taste. They brought in Hitto.
The position of Al-Khatib as leader became untenable.”
The coalition is widely recognised as the legitimate representative of the Syrian people.
Last month, Mr Khatib threatened to boycott an international summit on Syria in Rome because of what the coalition called “the world’s silence” over the continuing violence.
He relented after the coalition announced that Mr Kerry and William Hague, the Foreign Secretary, had “promised specific aid”. Mr Kerry remarked at the time they were “determined that the Syrian opposition is not going to be dangling in the wind.”
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