1. Introduction
1. Following the departure of
Mr Tobias Zech from the Parliamentary Assembly, I was appointed
rapporteur on 25 January 2018. Despite having worked only one year
on my report, in January 2019 I asked for the committee’s agreement
to adopt the report on 5 March. I believe that this is a critical
time for the political process in Syria, which deserves an Assembly
debate as soon as possible.
2. As Mr Staffan De Mistura, former United Nations Special Envoy
for Syria, stressed at the end of his mandate in December 2018,
“we need a renewed sense of common purpose and concerted action
in the United Nations Security Council, if 2019 is to be the real
turning point for Syria”. As the new Special Envoy, the Norwegian
Geir Pedersen, started his consultations in Damascus in January
2019, our Assembly should provide its input and put forward concrete
proposals for a post-war phase in Syria.
3. The bloody conflict, which has left more than 400 000 dead
and obliged millions to flee since 2011, has become ever more complex
over the past eight years with the involvement of international
players as well as with changing internal factors.
4. Since 2012, the Assembly has analysed the Syrian conflict
and related issues in a series of texts, starting with
Resolution 1878 (2012) on the situation in Syria.
In
June 2018, the Assembly adopted
Resolution
2224 (2018) on the humanitarian situation of refugees in the countries
neighbouring Syria, to which I refer for a thorough analysis of
the refugee issue.
5. On 25 November 2016, following a request for an urgent debate,
the Assembly also adopted
Resolution 2138
(2016) and
Recommendation
2096 (2016) on the situation in Aleppo. The report by Mr Jean Claude Mignon
discussed the political and humanitarian
consequences of the conflict and offered several recommendations
to the players involved.
6. The Committee of Ministers took note of
Recommendation 2096 (2016) and adopted a reply on 31 May 2017 at the 1287th meeting
of the Minister’s Deputies.
Referring to their own Declaration
on the situation in Syria adopted in 2012, the Committee of Ministers
reiterated that only a political solution can end the conflict and
underlined that support for a genuine political transition based
on the Geneva Communiqué of 30 June 2012 and United Nations Security
Council Resolution 2254 (2015) would pave the way for a new constitution and
free and fair elections.
7. Since the adoption of
Resolution
2138 (2016), the Syrian Government has recaptured Aleppo and other core
areas of the country, with the help of Russian air power and Iranian-sponsored
militias. Daesh lost control of Raqqa, a city they had declared
as their capital in Syria, and other key areas and the conflict
has spilled over Syria’s borders with increased military intervention
from multiple sources. Peace talks in Geneva, Astana and Sochi have
achieved some results, which I will discuss in this report, and
opened a window of opportunity for a credible political transition.
8. I intend to focus primarily on the impact of the Syrian conflict,
including the multiple humanitarian concerns and ongoing peace talks,
as well as the role of international actors and the effects on surrounding countries.
9. On 24 October 2017, the Committee of Political Affairs and
Democracy held an exchange of views with Mr Christian Springer,
founder of the non-profit organisation Orienthelfer. Hearings of
experts, with the participation of Mr Tarek Mitri, Director of the
American University Beirut, Mr Julien Barnes-Dacey, from the European
Council of Foreign Relations, and Mr Haid Haid, of Chatham House,
also took place on 14 November 2017, with Mr Eugenio Dacrema, from
the Italian Institute for International Studies (ISPI), on 12 March
2018 in Paris, as well as with Mr Sotirios Roussos, Associate Professor
at the University of Peloponnisos, on 22 May 2018 in Athens.
10. On 24 January 2018 and on 26 April 2018, the Assembly held
two current affairs debates: on Europe’s role in peace-making initiatives
in Syria, which was opened by Ms Rósa Björk Brynjólfsdóttir (Iceland,
UEL), and on the Turkish military intervention in Syria, opened
by Mr Tiny Kox (Netherlands, UEL). These discussions have greatly
informed my report and I thank our colleagues for their contributions.
11. Furthermore, on 24 October 2018, I paid a visit to Jordan
and expressed our wholehearted appreciation for the contribution
of Jordan in hosting over 1.3 million Syrian refugees. My visit
confirmed our common view that Jordan, as well other surrounding
countries such as Lebanon and Turkey, deserve greater international support
to deal with this delicate issue.
12. Finally, the committee organised an exchange of views with
the participation of Mr Salam Kawakibi, Director of the Arab Centre
for Research and Political studies, on 5 March 2019 in Paris.
13. At this critical time for the negotiations, it is essential
for our Assembly to support United Nations efforts and, in particular,
to stress the need to include all Syrian political forces, experts,
civil society, religious and tribal leaders and women in the future
constitutional committee, as a necessary political transition based
on the Geneva Communiqué of 30 June 2012 and United Nations Security
Council Resolution 2254 (2015). I therefore proposed to change the
title of my report as follows: “The situation in Syria: prospects
for a political solution?”.
2. Key facts with focus on 2018-2019
14. Syria began its descent into
civil war in early 2011, when government security forces shot and
killed protesters in the context of what seemed then to be the “Arab
Spring”. The brutal crackdown on these demonstrations provoked new
waves of protests. Between August and November 2011, the United
States, the European Union, Turkey and the Arab League countries
imposed economic sanctions against the Syrian regime for its crackdown
on civilian demonstrators. In June 2012, the fighting spread to
Aleppo, Syria’s second largest city and its commercial hub.
15. Over the past years, the jihadist group Daesh and other affiliated
terrorist groups joined the conflict. Daesh grew out of what was
al-Qaeda in Iraq, which was formed by Sunni militants after the
United States-led invasion in 2003 and became a major force in the
country’s sectarian insurgency. In 2011, Daesh joined the rebellion
against President Assad in Syria, where it found a safe haven and
easy access to weapons. In February 2013, armed groups, including
Daesh, seized control of strategic locations in the Raqqa province
and conquered the city a month later. The fall of Raqqa to Daesh
was followed by a campaign of attacks on civilians in the countryside,
arrests of activists and kidnapping of foreigners.
16. Throughout the conflict there have been multiple attempts
at countrywide peace talks backed by the United Nations or the Russian
Federation, but most of them have achieved limited results. Likewise,
the United Nation's Independent Commission of Inquiry on Syria has
issued nearly a dozen reports chronicling wartime atrocities. Commission
member Ms Carla del Ponte, who left the Commission in August 2017,
was quoted as saying: “At first there was good and bad: the opposition
on the side of good and the government in the bad role. However,
today everyone in Syria is on the bad side. The Assad government
has perpetrated horrible crimes against humanity and used chemical
weapons. And the opposition is now made up of extremists and terrorists.” She
added: “Believe me, the terrible crimes committed in Syria I neither
saw in Rwanda nor ex-Yugoslavia” and concluded that she had “no
power as long as the Security Council does nothing”.
17. The period 2011-2017 has seen an alternation of de-escalation,
tension, continuous fighting and negotiation talks, which saw the
involvement of Russia, Iran and Turkey, key vetoes by Russia of
UN Security Council resolutions calling for sanctions against the
Syrian Government in response to the use of chemical weapons, US
military attacks on Syrian bases and support to Kurdish forces,
and Turkey’s reactions.
18. Since the beginning of 2018, according to UN reports, the
warring parties carried out battles in Aleppo, northern Homs, Damascus,
and in the Rif Damascus, Dara’a and Idlib governorates, which collectively displaced
more than 1 million Syrian men, women and children. As at 5 February
2019, thousands of people had fled the last Daesh-held areas in
Hajin, in Syria’s south-eastern Deir Ezzour governorate. Those fleeing report
many civilian casualties, including women and children, large-scale
destruction of civilian infrastructure and shortage of food and
medicine.
19. There have been a series of worrying escalations, including
inside the de-escalation zones established by the “Astana guarantors”
(Russia, Iran and Turkey) and outside them, a return to back-and-forth
competition over territory and heavy and sustained airstrikes across
the northwest and in besieged Eastern Ghouta. There have also been
several allegations of chlorine attacks in Ghouta, Idlib, Afrin
and Douma.
20. On 20 January 2018, Turkey launched an incursion into Syria,
which it called “Operation Olive Branch”, to sweep the Syrian Kurdish
People’s Protection Units (YPG) militia from its southern border.
The assault had dire humanitarian consequences for the people in
Afrin and created the risk of a potential direct conflict with the
United States.
21. Turkey, the United States and Russia, as well as the Syrian
regime and the Kurds, who have used the civil war to set up an autonomous
region in what they hope to be a post-war federal Syria, are competing
for control of northern Syria, which is strategically adjacent to
Iraq and Turkey, with important oil resources.
22. Despite United Nations’ calls for a ceasefire early in February
2018, the suffering of civilians worsened in 2018. Fighting also
involved pro-government air strikes on the opposition enclave in
eastern Ghouta outside Damascus, which was the last major rebel
bastion
, and an offensive against rebels
in the north-western Idlib province, both previously declared “de-escalation
areas”. The two-month assault on Eastern Ghouta sparked an international
outcry, culminating in a suspected chemical attack on 7 April 2018,
with the UN Secretary General describing the conditions endured
by civilians there as “hell on Earth”.
23. On 14 April 2018, the United States, the United Kingdom and
France launched what they called “precision strikes” in Syria in
response to the suspected chemical attack of 7 April. President
Putin condemned the strikes as an “act of aggression” and denied
evidence of a chemical weapons attack, adding that the strike would
have a destructive effect on the entire system of international
relations.
24. For its part, the European Union reiterated its strongest
condemnation of the repeated use of chemical weapons by the Syrian
regime, as confirmed by the Organisation for the Prohibition of
Chemical Weapons (OPCW)/United Nations Joint Investigative Mechanism
(JIM), and, referring to the United States, French and United Kingdom
airstrikes, stressed that the sole objective of those measures was
“to prevent further use of chemical weapons and chemical substances
as weapons by the Syrian regime to kill its own people”.
25. In June and August 2018, the Syrian Government launched
an
offensive in the eastern part of the southern province of Daraa
and on Idlib, where some 2.9 million people lived. However, in September
2018, Russia and Turkey agreed to avert a threatened Syrian offensive
on Idlib, which could have propelled another wave of refugees into
Turkey, where nearly 4 million have already fled.
26. On 19 December 2018, proclaiming the “defeat of Daesh”, US
President Trump announced plans to withdraw all of the approximately
2 000 American troops from Syria. On 17 February 2019, he also asked
the United Kingdom, France, Germany and other European allies to
take back and put on trial more than 800 Daesh fighters being held
by Kurdish-led forces. In January 2019, the United Nations was still
expressing its concern over reports that civilians, including women,
children and medical workers, had been killed and injured due to
ongoing intense hostilities between non-State armed groups in the
north-west part of the country. Recent fighting has also been reported
in northern Hama, in the southern part of the Idlib governorate,
and on the Iraqi border at Baghuz.
27. At the end of January 2019, the Turkish Foreign Minister signalled
that Turkey might agree to a limited Russian-backed Syrian offensive
to retake Idlib, which would be a major policy reversal for Turkey,
which has backed Syrian opposition forces throughout the war. Three million
people live in the Idlib Governorate, where the risk of military
escalation still looms.
28. Last but not least, we must bear in mind that the capture
of Daesh-held territory does not mean an end to its ideological
and terrorist threat as Daesh forces are already regathering in
Iraq, notably Mosul.
3. The
humanitarian consequences of the conflict
29. The direct casualties of the
conflict have been estimated to be over 400 000 depending on the
source, including over 11 000 in 2017
and 19 799 in 2018.
This figure does not include the
thousands of people who might have died at sea or on land trying
to cross international borders to escape the war.
30. According to the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Refugees (UNHCR),
over 5.6 million people have fled
Syria since 2011, seeking safety in Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey and
beyond, while only 10% have sought safety in other, European countries.
6.6 million people are displaced inside Syria, 13.1 million people
are in need and 2.98 million are in hard-to-reach and besieged areas.
85% of Syrians live in poverty, with the vast majority of them living
in abject or extreme poverty. The parties involved in the conflict have
exacerbated the situation by not allowing humanitarian agencies
access to many of the people in need.
31. While warring parties made some progress in reducing violence
through de-escalation zones, they continue to perpetrate unthinkable
crimes against civilians in blatant violation of international law,
including forced displacements, deliberate attacks and the use of
chemical weapons.
32. On 21 December 2016, the UN General Assembly established the
International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism (IIIM) to “collect,
consolidate, preserve and analyse evidence of violations of international
humanitarian law and human rights violations and abuses and to prepare
files in order to facilitate and expedite fair and independent criminal
proceedings … in national, regional or international courts or tribunals
that have or may in the future have jurisdiction over these crimes”.
33. On 10 February 2018, the UN High Commissioner for Human Rights,
Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein, said that the “prevailing climate of impunity
has to be addressed and civilians must be protected. After seven
years of paralysis in the Security Council, the situation in Syria
is crying out to be referred to the International Criminal Court,
as well as for a much more concerted effort by States to bring peace.
The conduct and management of this war has been utterly shameful
from the outset, and the failure to end it marks an epic failure
of global diplomacy”.
34. On 22 February 2018, together with Ms Sevinj Fataliyeva (Azerbaijan,
EC), former rapporteur on protecting children affected by armed
conflicts, I issued a statement calling all parties to the conflict
to put an end to the humanitarian tragedy in Eastern Ghouta, in
particular for the sake of children, the most vulnerable group.
35. The Independent International Commission of Inquiry on the
Syrian Arab Republic, established in August 2011 by the Human Rights
Council, identified around 34 documented incidents of the use of
chemical weapons by various parties to the conflict, which are strictly
prohibited under international law, including the 1997 Chemical
Weapons Convention, ratified by 192 States including Syria.
According to a study of the Berlin-based
Global Public Policy Institute of February 2019, at least 336 chemical
weapons attacks have occurred since 2012.
The most recent allegation of a chemical
attack in Aleppo dates to 24 November 2018. According to the 63rd
monthly report of the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical
Weapons (OPCW) of December 2018, toxic chemicals are still being
used as weapons in Syria.
In this context, we must underline that
it is the responsibility of the UN Security Council to act by referring
the situation in Syria to the International Criminal Court (ICC).
As Syria is not a State Party to the ICC, a referral by the Security
Council based on article 13(b) of the Rome Statute is necessary
to give jurisdiction to the ICC to investigate crimes committed
that may fall under its jurisdiction.
36. Life under Daesh rule has also been marked by summary executions,
child recruitment and severe corporal punishment of civilians accused
of violating the group’s ideology, and the destruction of cultural heritage
sites, including the Tetrapylon in Palmyra.
37. Across northern Syria, Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG)
or Syrian Democratic forces (SDF) have displaced communities in
order to clear areas mined by Daesh. In some cases, YPG or SDF forces
did not provide adequate humanitarian aid to displaced communities.
YPG forces persist in forcibly conscripting men and boys for military
service.
38. Speaking before our committee, Mr Springer, founder of the
non-profit organisation Orienthelfer, discussed the dire situation
of refugees, in particular in Lebanon where there are two main refugee
camps and 2 000 informal settlements. Lebanon, a country of 6 million
people, has received approximately 1.5 million refugees. Non-governmental
organisations (NGOs) have an 80% shortfall of money because people
think that it is possible for refugees to go back to Syria.
39. The security and peace structures of the countries receiving
refugees have been challenged not only in Lebanon, but also in Jordan
and Iraq. Jordanian officials I met in Amman last October confirmed
that the demanding task of receiving Syrians fleeing the war has
pushed Jordan to the brink of its capabilities and might lead to
a re-examination of Jordan’s refugee policy.
40. In October 2018, a few days prior to my visit, two key border
crossings with Syria’s neighbours, Israel and Jordan, reopened.
According to the UNHCR, up to 250 000 Syrian refugees could return
to their homeland in 2019, while many others face problems with
documentation and property that the Syrian Government must help
resolve. However, a survey conducted by NAMA Strategic Intelligence
Solutions in November 2018, in partnership with the Konrad Adenauer
Stiftung, covering 1 306 Jordanians and 600 Syrian refugees, found
that 33% of Syrian refugees said that they “will never go back”
and 24% said they “probably will not go back”.
41. Instability constitutes a major obstacle to their return. This
suggests that priority should be given to the security, stability
and reconstruction of Syria to build stronger pull factors to encourage
refugees to go back from Jordan, Lebanon, Turkey and other European
countries, to reduce the radicalisation and polarisation of European
politics towards the far-right and to ease tensions in resource-poor
countries neighbouring Syria.
42. The deal struck by the European Union with Turkey on migrants
has not solved the problem as Syrian refugees seem trapped in conditions
that violate their most basic rights even in Europe. For instance,
inhumane conditions in detention camps in Greece have been criticised
by the international community and NGOs.
43. The education of Syrian children is also an issue, not to
mention the psychological trauma caused by the war. Even though
several European projects are providing education through NGOs,
at least one third of Syrian children are not going to school, increasing
their risk of radicalisation.
44. What is more, the United Nations Population Fund conducted
an assessment of gender-based violence in Syria in 2017 and concluded
that humanitarian assistance was being exchanged for sex in various governorates
in Syria.
45. The European Union is a leading donor and has allocated over €10.8
billion in humanitarian, economic development and stabilisation
assistance since the start of the crisis. In July 2017, it announced
it would provide €1.5 million to support the Independent International
Commission of Inquiry on the Syrian Arab Republic
and in April 2018 mobilised
humanitarian aid to Syrians inside the country and in neighbouring countries,
including for hosting communities, through pledges totalling €3.5
billion for 2018, as well as multi-year pledges of €2.7 billion
for 2019-2020.
At the EU Foreign Affairs Council
of 18 February 2019, EU Ministers reiterated that the European Union
will be ready to assist in the reconstruction of Syria only when
a comprehensive, genuine and inclusive political transition is firmly
under way. The “Brussels 3” conference on “Supporting the future
of Syria and the region”, scheduled from 12 to 14 March 2019, will
aim at mobilising the international community behind humanitarian
and resilience efforts for the Syrian people and host communities.
46. In December 2018, UN agencies and NGO partners released the
2019-2020 Regional Refugee and Resilience Plan (3RP), a US$5.5 billion
plan designed to support national efforts in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan, Egypt
and Iraq to deal with the continued impact of the Syria crisis.
As stressed by the UNDP, as the international community, we must
do our utmost to show solidarity with these vulnerable hosts who
are giving so much despite their own difficulties in making ends
meet. Our collective response must also ensure that host countries
are supported to pursue development.
4. International
involvement: a complex balance of powers and spheres of influence
47. The conflict has degenerated
over the years into more than a civil war between those for and
against the Assad regime. Sectarianism in Syria was nurtured under
Assad rule, eventually creating animosity amongst different religious
communities. The war translated this segmentation between religious
and ethnic groups. Sectarianism is considered as an important contributing
factor to the war and the difficulty in finding a political solution.
48. Furthermore, the involvement of international actors has created
even more complex alliances and conflicting interests. For instance,
the Shia and Sunni division, Iranian, Saudi Arabian, Russian and
US interests, and the rivalry between Turkey and the Kurds, affect
the balance of powers and add to the complexity.
49. Initially, a number of political opposition factions came
together into the “Syrian National Coalition” with the goal of overthrowing
the Assad regime. Subsequently, there have been four main factions
of fighting groups within the country: Syrian government forces
(mainly the Syrian Arab army), Syrian opposition (various armed groups
constituting the Syrian National Coalition), Kurdish forces, Daesh
and other terrorist groups such as Jaish al Fateh, an alliance between
the Al Nusra Front and Ahrar-al-Sham.
50. Shia power in Iran is believed to be spending billions of
dollars to support the Alawite-dominated government and provides
military advisors and weapons as well as credit and oil transfers.
Syria is the main transit point for Iranian weapon shipments to
the Lebanese Shia Islamist movement Hezbollah, which has also sent
thousands of fighters to support government forces.
51. Relations between Iran and Israel have become more tense over
the past year. Israel sees its greatest strategic threat in the
growing presence of Iranian-affiliated groups near its borders,
as well as in Iran’s nuclear and ballistic missile ambitions.
The planned US withdrawal from Syria
also means that Israel could lose its strongest support against
Iranian forces.
52. Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia is believed to have provided military
and financial assistance to the Syrian rebels. It views Iran’s support
for Shia groups as a direct threat to Saudi interests.
53. Since 2014, the United States has provided military assistance
to the Syrian opposition and the Kurdish armed groups, fearful that
advanced weapons might end up in the hands of jihadists. This has
also created direct confrontation between the United States and
Turkey. It is possible that the withdrawal of the US military from
Syria may inspire Daesh to return. French President Macron stated
that Daesh is not yet defeated and reaffirmed his engagement in
Syria throughout 2019.
54. While Daesh has lost nearly all the territory it once held,
experts estimate that it still has thousands of fighters who have
returned to their insurgent roots and can still mount attacks. Daesh
has been accused by the United Nations of conducting a campaign
of terror, inflicting severe punishments on those who transgress
or refuse to accept its rules, including hundreds of public executions
and amputations. Its fighters have also carried out mass killings
of rival armed groups, members of the security forces, civilians
and religious minorities and beheaded hostages, including several
Westerners. Several challenges remain in a post-war Syria, namely the
fate of former Daesh fighters and supporters and whether there should
be an integration process allowing those people to live peacefully
in the area after having worked on changing their violent mentality.
55. The planned US withdrawal may also cause concerns for the
safety of the Syrian Kurds, who felt betrayed, especially after
the Turkish President announced a new military operation targeting
Kurdish territory east of Manbij. The Assad government and its allies
want the territory to fall back under the control of Damascus.
56. Over the years, Turkey has backed rebel groups against the
Syrian Government. However, by 2015, its position shifted as the
Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) carved out a large chunk
of territory in northeast Syria. Recently, President Erdoğan stated
that Turkey's “sole purpose” was to fight groups such as Daesh and the
YPG and Foreign Minister Mevlüt Çavuşoğlu added that Turkey would
consider working with President Assad if he won democratic elections.
57. Russia entered the conflict in September 2015, carrying out
bombings against Assad opponents, but had allegedly been providing
funding to Assad behind the scenes earlier on. Russia has always
stressed that it would only target “terrorists”.
58. Even among the regime’s supporters, there are substantial
divisions: Russia would like to see a strong State that could provide
stability and security within Syria while Iran aims to create a
model similar to Lebanon and Iraq, with strong non-State actors
allying with Iran and a weak State.
59. As a sign of normalisation, at the end of December 2018, the
United Arab Emirates and Bahrain re-opened their embassy in Damascus.
The Syrian regime and Iran are likely to use this rapprochement
to promote their “victory narrative” in Syria.
5. Recent
developments in the peace process
60. Although since 2011 there have
been several international initiatives that aimed to bring an end
to the war, the two main diplomatic tracks have been the UN-sponsored
talks in Geneva, and the talks in Astana, facilitated by Russia
and Turkey.
61. As mandated by UN Security Council Resolution 2254 (2015),
the UN-sponsored talks have focused on governance, a schedule and
a process to draft a new constitution and the holding of elections
as the basis for a Syrian-led, Syrian-owned a process to end the
conflict. Discussions also include counter-terrorism strategies. The
United Nations has convened eight rounds of intra-Syrian talks since
2016.
62. In parallel, the parties were convened in Ankara, in December
2016, by Russia, Turkey and Iran, and agreed to a nationwide ceasefire
that began on 30 December 2016. Throughout 2017 and 2018, the parties attended
Astana talks in Kazakhstan. These talks, convened by the three guarantors,
Russia, Turkey and Iran, resulted in an agreement to create four
“de-escalation zones” in Syria. So far results have been mixed.
Astana has produced partial ceasefires, which have been frequently
violated by all sides, and there has been no headway on issues like
humanitarian access to besieged areas.
63. Former UN Special Envoy, Staffan de Mistura, repeatedly stressed
that the peace process would be based on UN Security Council Resolution
2254 (2015), which called for the end of attacks on civilians, the exclusion
of Daesh and the al-Nusra Front, the establishment of a multi-ethnic
society that includes all religious and ethnic groups in Syria,
the creation of a new constitution of Syria, and the holding of
free and fair elections within 18 months. The Special Envoy has
constantly affirmed Syria’s sovereignty and stressed that the political process
must be owned and led by Syrians.
64. The establishment of a 150-member constitutional committee
for Syria was agreed at peace talks held in Sochi, Russia, in January
2018,
with
a view to creating a new more inclusive system of governance in Syria,
in line with the Syrian-led and Syrian-owned political process mandated
by Security Council Resolution 2254 (2015).
65. At a UN Security Council briefing in October 2018, Mr de Mistura
noted that the Government of Syria had proposed that the United
Nations withdraw its list of 50 individuals put forward to serve
on the committee with a view to creating a more democratic post-war
Syria. This “Middle Third List” included delegates that represented
Syrian experts, civil society, independents, tribal leaders and
women. The other delegates were to be drawn from the government
and the opposition.
66. The Syrian leadership views the constitutional reform as an
internal matter and has underlined the principle of non-interference,
adding that the constitution is a sensitive matter of national sovereignty.
I fully agree with the former Special Envoy that the Security Council
alone is responsible for the maintenance of international peace
and security. It has mandated the United Nations to facilitate the
intra-Syrian political process for the implementation of Resolution
2254. That is the only way to enable Syrians to determine their own
future.
67. According to the United Nations, the composition of the middle
third group must meet the criteria of inclusiveness, credibility
and diversity, include people who side neither with the government
nor the opposition, and a minimum 30% of women. Women’s participation
in peace processes is critical. A 2015 study by the Graduate Institute
of International and Development Studies in Geneva on 40 peace processes
found that when women participate, peace agreements are 35% more
likely to last for at least 15 years.
68. On 27 June 2018, our committee held an exchange of views with
the participation of Ms Rajaa Altalli, co-founder and co-director
of the Center for Civil Society and Democracy in Syria, who also
attended a side-event organised by the Conference of International
Non-governmental Organisations (INGOs) on the implementation of
UN Security Council Resolution 1325 (2000) on Women, Peace and Security.
Ms Altalli is also a member of the Syrian Women’s Advisory Board,
set up by the United Nations in 2015 to advise the Special Envoy.
The Board met in Geneva but did not take part in the official negotiations.
Our exchange confirmed the need to include women in conflict prevention,
conflict resolution and reconciliation efforts to ensure that women’s
interests and lived experiences are fully reflected in peace processes,
and that women are equally considered in recovery efforts in the
aftermath of conflicts.
69. Some progress has been made during numerous meetings that
took place in late 2018 and early 2019, including among and between
representatives of the Astana guarantors’ group on Syria (Iran,
Turkey and Russia)
, among participants in the quadripartite
meetings (Germany, France, Russia and Turkey), as well as members
of the so-called Small Group (Egypt, France, Germany, Jordan, Saudi
Arabia, United Kingdom and the United States). These consultations
have confirmed once more the necessity to establish a Syrian-owned, Syrian-led,
UN-facilitated constitutional committee to draft a constitutional
reform for popular approval.
70. On 15 January 2019, the newly appointed UN Special Envoy for
Syria, Geir O. Pederson, began rounds of consultations in Damascus
to gather support for a UN-facilitated political solution, addressing
all issues related to governance, the constitutional process, and
the need for UN-supervised elections.
6. Concluding
remarks and recommendations
71. What began as a brutal crackdown
by Syria’s security forces on civilian demonstrators dissatisfied
with the Assad regime in early 2011 has resulted in eight long years
of bloody war, one of the worst humanitarian crises the world has
faced since the Second World War.
72. The conflict continues to have devastating consequences for
the Syrian people and has so far claimed over 400 000 lives and
driven some 11.7 million people, that is 50% of the Syrian population,
from their homes, including over 5.6 million to seek refuge into
neighbouring countries and beyond. It is also having a destabilising
impact on the Middle East and the Arab World, as well as on Europe
through the exacerbation of political and sectarian differences
and the spread of terrorism.
73. The humanitarian situation continues to be extremely worrying,
with 13 million Syrians in need of humanitarian assistance, of which
one third live in areas that cannot be accessed from inside Syria,
including 2 million internally displaced persons in the so-called
Idlib de-escalation area.
74. The impact of armed conflict on civilians in Syria, in particular
in the north-west, north-east and south-east of the country, remains
deeply alarming. While welcoming the progress made in taking back
areas of Syria from Daesh and other terrorist groups, we must also
urge all parties involved in military operations against them to
take all feasible precautions to avoid harm to the thousands of
civilians who are trapped in the middle of air strikes and ground
fighting, in accordance with their obligations under international
humanitarian law. In Idlib and the surrounding areas, we must appeal
to all parties to maintain de-escalation and the agreed demilitarised zone,
and to protect civilians.
75. Our Assembly should welcome the progress made in the negotiations
by the UN Special Envoy and the international community, including
within the Astana framework, and call on the international community
as a whole to unite as one to enable the political process, as mandated
by the UN Security Council, to move forward. It should call on all
sides in the conflict to:
- reinforce
the ceasefire in all areas of the country, allow humanitarian convoys
to proceed, and facilitate safe, rapid, unhindered and sustained
humanitarian assistance;
- mobilise financing for immediate, life-saving needs in
support of the Syrian people, and children in particular, including
their rights to live, adequate food, shelter and medical care;
- continue to take steps, consistent with international
law, to prevent and suppress the flow of foreign terrorist fighters
to Daesh and affiliated terrorist groups, as determined by the UN
Security Council;
- create conditions for the safe, voluntary and dignified
return of refugees and displaced persons, in compliance with internationally
accepted human rights and humanitarian law norms and standards, relating
to housing, land and property rights.
76. Severe human rights violations, such as unlawful killings,
including of children, of medical personnel and hospital patients,
torture, arbitrary arrest, disproportionate and indiscriminate shelling
of civilian areas, kidnappings, executions, the systematic denial,
in some areas, of food and water and the prevention of medical treatment,
have been some of the most prominent issues raised by the international
community.
77. Accountability for serious violations of international humanitarian
law, human rights violations, war crimes and crimes against humanity
is central to achieving sustainable peace in Syria and facilitating
a national reconciliation process and transitional justice. Therefore,
our Assembly must:
- call upon
all parties to the conflict, in particular the Syrian Government,
civil society and the United Nations system to co-operate fully
with the International, Impartial and Independent Mechanism to Assist in
the Investigation and Prosecution of Persons Responsible for the
Most Serious Crimes under International Law Committed in the Syrian
Arab Republic since March 2011, in particular by providing relevant
information and documentation;
- call for the situation in Syria to be referred to the
International Criminal Court by the UN Security Council, on the
basis of Article 13(b) of the Rome Statute.
78. I am also deeply concerned about the allegation of a chemical
attack in Aleppo on 24 November 2018. The use of chemical weapons
by any party, under any circumstances cannot be justified. Our Assembly
should reiterate its strongest condemnation of the repeated use
of chemical weapons, which are strictly prohibited under international
law, including the 1997 Chemical Weapons Convention, ratified by
192 States including Syria. It is imperative to identify the perpetrators
and hold them accountable.
79. Furthermore, the Assembly should also urge all parties to
adhere to the peace roadmap, in line with the Syrian-led political
process, under the auspices of the UN Special Envoy for Syria, as
mandated by UN Security Council Resolution 2254 (2015) and the Geneva
communiqué of 30 June 2012, and seize the current opportunity to
find lasting peace, in particular by:
- making progress on the establishment of a legitimate,
credible, diverse and balanced constitutional committee to draft
a constitutional reform, as a contribution to the political settlement
and a more democratic post-war Syria, in line with the Sochi final
statement of 30 January 2018;
- ensuring that the constitutional committee allows for
the inclusive participation of the political opposition and of civil
society, including delegates representing Syrian experts, non-governmental
organisations, religious and tribal leaders and a minimum of 30%
of women, as proposed by the United Nations.
80. The Council of Europe could contribute to the efforts of the
United Nations, bearing in mind its expertise in institutional matters
and the objectives set by UN Security Council Resolution 2254 (2015).
The constitutional committee could avail itself of the experience
and expertise of the European Commission for Democracy through Law
(Venice Commission) in the future constitutional reform process.
81. Last but not least, I wish to stress that the Syrian refugee
crisis is the responsibility not only of neighbouring States and
of Europe, but of the international community as a whole. I express
my deep appreciation for the significant efforts that have been
made by Lebanon, Jordan, Turkey, Iraq and Egypt, to accommodate
Syrian refugees. As at 24 January 2019, there were 3.5 million Syrians
registered by the Government of Turkey, 2 million Syrians registered
by the UNHCR in Egypt, Iraq, Jordan and Lebanon, as well as more
than 33 000 Syrian refugees registered in North Africa. In line
with
Resolution
2224 (2018) on the humanitarian situation of refugees in the countries
neighbouring Syria, we must reiterate our call on Council of Europe
member States to:
- step up financial
contributions to the United Nations Regional Refugee and Resilience
Plan, to satisfy funding requirements to support national efforts
in Turkey, Lebanon, Jordan and Iraq;
- achieve more effective sharing of responsibility through
the implementation of resettlement and other forms of legal admission
of refugees from the region to their countries;
- use all available diplomatic means to encourage fairer
responsibility sharing with non-European Union countries and those
involved in the Middle East process.
82. Finally, our Assembly should fully support the efforts of
the newly appointed UN Special Envoy for Syria, Mr Geir O. Pedersen,
and share the goal of the United Nations to end the suffering of
the Syrian people and find a sustainable and peaceful solution to
the conflict through an inclusive and Syrian-led political process
that meets the legitimate aspirations of the Syrian people.