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Arab FMs Agree Syria Sanctions, Lebanon 'Disassociates' Itself

Arab foreign ministers agreed a list of sweeping sanctions Sunday designed to cripple the Syrian regime which has defied pressure to halt a bloody crackdown on protests.

The 22-member Arab League agreed to ban Syrian officials from visiting any Arab country, to freeze government assets, suspend flights and halt any transactions with the Syrian government and central bank.

The sanctions, announced by Qatari Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassem al-Thani after a meeting in Cairo, are the first time the organization has taken such economic measures against another country in the region.

"We hope that (the Syrian regime) puts an end to the massacres so that this resolution (authorizing sanctions) is not put into force," said Sheikh Hamad, but he added that "the signs are not positive."

He also called for "an end to the massacres, the freeing of prisoners and the withdrawal of tanks" from Syrian cities.

Syrian state television said in a terse statement that the decision to impose sanctions on a member state was "an unprecedented measure" while several hundred Syrians gathered in a central Damascus square to denounce the move.

Long seen as a weak institution dominated by the region's autocrats, the Arab League has taken on an increasingly activist role during the pro-democracy Arab Spring demonstrations of the past 12 months.

Nineteen of the Arab League's 22 members voted for the sanctions, but Iraq abstained and said it would refuse to implement them, while Lebanon "disassociated itself," Sheikh Hamad said.

Iraqi Foreign Minister Hoshyar Zebari, whose country has close economic ties with Syria and a large refugee community in its western neighbor, had said beforehand that it was "not possible" to impose sanctions on Assad's regime.

Even without Iraq's participation, the impact is expected to be crippling on a country already facing a raft of EU and U.S. sanctions, and which depends on its Arab neighbors for half of its exports and a quarter of its imports.

Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu has also said his government will harmonize measures with those of the Arab League, saying that Ankara's former ally had missed its "last chance" by failing to heed the Arab ultimatum.

Damascus has defied an ultimatum to accept observers under an Arab League peace plan and put an end to the eight-month crackdown which the United Nations says has killed more than 3,500 people.

Syrian Economy Minister Mohammed Nidal al-Shaar told Agence France Presse before the decision that sanctions would be "very unfortunate because the damage will be to all sides."

In a letter to the Arab League on Saturday, Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem accused the organization of seeking to "internationalize" the crisis in his country.

The violence showed no sign of abating, however, with Syrian security forces accused of killing at least 15 civilians on Sunday, six of them in the flashpoint region of Homs that has been under siege for several weeks.

Iraq also abstained from a vote earlier this month that saw the Arab League decide to suspend Syria's membership and threaten sanctions, while Lebanon joined Yemen and Syria itself in opposing the resolution.

Source: Agence France Presse


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