2 Sep 2013

Syria asks UN to stop any US strike

10:03 pm on 2 September 2013

Syria has asked the United Nations to prevent "any aggression" against it following the call by American President Barack Obama for punitive strikes against the military for last month's chemical weapon attack.

Washington says more than 1400 people, many of them children, were killed in the world's worst use of chemical arms since Iraq's Saddam Hussein gassed thousands of Kurds in 1988.

United States military action will be put to a vote in Congress, which ends its summer recess on 9 September, giving President Bashar al-Assad time to prepare the ground for any assault and try to rally international support against the use of force, Reuters reports.

In a letter to UN chief Ban Ki-moon and Security Council president Maria Cristina Perceval, Syrian UN envoy Ambassador Bashar Ja'afari called on "the UN Secretary General to shoulder his responsibilities for preventing any aggression on Syria and pushing forward reaching a political solution to the crisis in Syria", state news agency SANA said on Monday.

He called on the Security Council to "maintain its role as a safety valve to prevent the absurd use of force out of the frame of international legitimacy".

Mr Ja'afari said the United States should "play its role, as a peace sponsor and as a partner to Russia in the preparation for the international conference on Syria and not as a state that uses force against whoever opposes its policies".

Syria denies using chemical weapons and accuses rebel groups, who have been fighting for more than two years to topple Assad's regime, of using the banned weapons.

US Secretary of State John Kerry said on Sunday that tests showed sarin nerve gas was fired on rebel-held areas on 21 August.

Mr Ja'afari said Mr Kerry had "adopted old stories fabricated by terrorists" based on fake photos from the internet.