
| A man sits on the ruins of what was once his house and workshop, destroyed the day before by a 500lb bomb allegedly dropped by the Syrian airforce in the town of Maaret al-Numan in southern Idlib province. At least 39,000 people have been killed across Syria since the outbreak of the revolt over a year ago. AFP PHOTO |
MOSCOW: Russian Prime Minister Dmitry Medvedev slammed as “unacceptable” the recognition and support by France and other states of the Syrian opposition battling the regime of President Bashar al-Assad.
In a wide-ranging interview with Agence France-Presse and Le Figaro ahead of a visit to Paris starting on Monday, Medvedev also spoke of the European Union (EU) economic crisis as a “serious threat” and did not rule out returning to the Kremlin in the future.
Britain and France have joined Turkey and Arabian Peninsula states in recognizing the newly formed opposition bloc, the Syrian National Coalition (SNC), as the sole representative of the Syrian people. Britain, Italy and the European Union (EU) swiftly joined the move.
Paris has also suggested arming the opposition fighters. It raised the idea of excluding defensive weapons for the rebels from the current blanket EU embargo on Syria.
“From the point of view of international law, this is absolutely unacceptable,” Medvedev said in the interview at his suburban Gorki residence.
“A desire to change the political regime of another state by recognizing a political force as the sole carrier of sovereignty seems to me to be not completely civilized,” he added.
“Let the Syrian people decide the personal fate of Assad and his regime,” said Medvedev. It is preferable if they [the opposition forces] came to power legally and not because of deliveries of arms from other countries,” he said.
EU economic crisis
Medvedev also said that Moscow was nervously watching the economic crisis in the EU, which he said represented a serious threat to Russia’s own economic performance.
“We see this as a very serious threat,” said Medvedev. “We are to a large extent dependent on what happens in the economies of the EU.”
Medvedev noted that EU states account for half of Russia’s trade volume while Moscow holds some 41 percent of its foreign currency reserves in euros.
“We are watching nervously. Sometimes it seems our European partners lack the energy and will to take decisions. And there is that endless dispute of what is better, fiscal consolidation or development,” he said.
“It seems our European partners are moving towards an agreement but the main thing is that it is not late,” he added.
Medvedev said that Russia is paying particular attention to what he described as the “weak links” in the euro zone such as Greece and Spain.
But he emphasized that Russia has no intention of moving out of euros in its reserves even though he acknowledged bringing up the importance of the currency in conversations with EU leaders.
Medvedev also said he is not ruling out a return to the Kremlin after his 2008-2012 single term as Russian head of state but was happy working as premier under his mentor President Vladimir Putin.
Medvedev served as president after Putin stepped aside following the maximum two consecutive terms allowed by the constitution after his 2000-2008 stint.
But Putin, 60, stayed on as a powerful prime minister and Medvedev, 47, never fully emerged from the shadow of his fellow Saint Petersburg native, an impression strongly reinforced when Putin returned to the Kremlin in May 2012.
Some of Medvedev’s supporters—who saw him as a possible champion of a refreshed, innovative and more pro-Western Russia—were hugely disappointed by his apparent surrender of the Kremlin to Putin.
Published : Thursday January 17, 2013 | Category : headlines | Hits:912
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