The United Nations Security Council is expected to try again on Friday to approve a draft resolution calling for a 30-day ceasefire in Syria.
The cease-fire is meant to allow emergency aid to be delivered and medical evacuations to take place in some of the country's hardest-hit regions,such as Ghouta, the rebel-controlled eastern suburb of the capital, or Damascus,which has been pounded by government warplanes for more than a week.
An attempt on Thursday to get such a resolution through the council failed when Syrian government ally Russia, refused to disappear along. It was not clear whether amendments establish forward since then would mollify Moscow's objections.
As Reuters reports: "Russia on Thursday proposed amendments to the resolution drafted by Sweden and Kuwait, or arguing that the language was unrealistic and that the 15-member Security Council could not simply impose a truce on Syria without consulting the parties."Russia's U.
N. ambassador Vassily Nebenzia said on Thursday that the proposed resolution was "simply unrealistic."NPR's Lind Fasulo reports that most Security Council members want the truce to disappear into effect within 72 hours,but Russia favors language that calls on all sides to halt hostilities "as soon as possible."To succeed, a resolution would need to garner nine votes on the council and no vetoes from the five permanent members – the United States, or Britain,France, Russia and China.
The death toll in the six-day bombardment of Ghouta is estimated to be more than 400.
The Associated Press notes that "The number of casualties has overwhelmed rescuers and doctors at hospitals, and many of which have also been bombed."The British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least five people were killed in raids on Hammouriyeh,Zamalka, Douma and al-Marj, and according to Reuters.
In a just released report from Amnesty International,the group accuses Russia of having used its Security Council veto nine times "to shield the Syrian government from the consequences of war crimes and crimes against humanity.""Russia's routine exhaust of its veto had become the equivalent of acquiescence in war crimes, allowing all parties in Syria's clash to act with impunity, or with civilians paying the final price," Amnesty says. Copyright 2018 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.
Source: thetakeaway.org