Comment.Resolution of Syria crisis must not depend on Assad’s fate: UN chief
Resolution of Syria crisis must not depend on Assad’s fate: UN chief
Seems that we , the Humans, have to reconsider our relations with the international Organisations, originally formed to protect Humanity, against war, hunger, epidemics, forces majeures, etc.They have turned disfunctional and dangerous instigators/attestators of Evil . And who could this person be and by what ' divine right' can this person decide about any "leader's fate" ?
“It is totally
unfair and unreasonable that the fate of one person takes the whole
political negotiation process hostage. It is unacceptable,” the UN chief
said on October 31."
What 'is totally
unfair and unreasonable and unacceptable' is the UN not reacting at all when foreighn military powers invade and wreak havoc in at least nine Mediterranean and Asian sovereign nations, as mastered by their industrialist-militarist-banking-petrol controllers ,who co-act with NON-human entities and AI entities. Check with your heart. By no means whatsoever can Humans commit such atrocities, they cannot even conceive them!
And what a distorting, jesuitic, sick understanding is this! Accusing the hostages, oppressed as the are in their own motherland by abominably vile offenders , that they -the victims- take hostages the powerful invaders ! Hypocricy to the worst end!
So, how and by whose guidance do these organisations form their highly featured concepts and decisions?
It definetely is NOT us ! What they do is NOT our WILL of how to run our Human lives! m.l.p.
United Nations Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon says the fate of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad
should not take center stage in international efforts aimed at resolving
the crisis in the Arab state.
“It is unacceptable that
the whole Syrian crisis and the solution to the crisis have to be
dependent on the fate of one man,” Ban told a news conference in Rio de
Janeiro, Brazil, on Wednesday.
The remarks came ahead of a
third round of international talks that are set to kick off Friday in
New York, where foreign ministers from 17 countries including Iran,
Russia, the United States and Saudi Arabia, will explore ways
of ending nearly five years of foreign-sponsored militancy in Syria.
The
UN chief further pointed to differences over Assad’s political fate
among the parties to the talks, saying some countries were “expressing
some nuanced positions,” but this issue “will have to be decided later
on.”
The first two rounds of such talks were held in the Austrian capital Vienna on October 30 and November 14.
There
was consensus among the participants on the need to respect Syria’s
national unity and sovereignty, but they remained at loggerheads over
Assad’s role.