Paris - Arab Today
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius on Tuesday derided "the Syrian regime and its leader Bashar Al-Assad" for planning presidential elections in that war-torn country for June 3, saying the conditions in Syria were totally against the holding of any credible ballot.
"Bashar Al-Assad, the absolute tyrant - 150,000 dead - and this person, in a tragic parody, has the nerve to present a phantom election that is to take place in June," Fabius commented ironically.
"There is no question for an instant of supporting Bashar Al-Assad," Fabius affirmed. But he drew a complex picture of the current state-of-play in Syria and the forces that are deployed in this conflict.
He said that France could not support "terrorist groups" that are fighting Al-Assad, especially in view of what they have done to hostages, including the four French journalists released three days ago.
"If we want neither Bashar Al-Assad nor the terrorists, what remains in the 'moderate' opposition and this 'moderate' opposition is supported by around a hundred countries, among them us," the Minister noted.
Admitting that 500 people had left France to fight the Syrian regime, Fabius said there was "no justification" for lending a hand to terrorist organisations which are guilty of brutality, including "torture" and "assassinations".
Fabius said that "there has to be a political solution and we have said this from the start." While he did not see Al-Assad leaving now, he said his departure was "desirable." "Unfortunately, and we have to say it as it is, Bashar Al-Assad has the support of the Iranians, the Russians and Hezbollah," he indicated, warning of the "dramatic consequences" the conflict is having on Syria and the countries of the region - Jordan, Lebanon, and Iraq.
The solution is "political," he repeated, but "the countries involved must accept the political solution."
Source: KUNA