Security Council weighs options over Syria attack
Three different draft resolution circulated at the Security Council as US weighs military intervention.
Ten
non-permanent Security Council countries have circulated a compromise
resolution demanding a full investigation of the suspected chemical
attack in Syria in a move designed to avoid a clash with Russia.
The new text - the third now before the council on investigating the apparent gas attack - was presented ahead of a closed-door meeting of the 15-member council on Syria on Thursday evening.
The new text - the third now before the council on investigating the apparent gas attack - was presented ahead of a closed-door meeting of the 15-member council on Syria on Thursday evening.
The
US, UK and France proposed a first draft resolution on Tuesday to
condemn the attack and press Syria to cooperate with international
investigators.
Russia
said the text was unacceptable and proposed a rival draft that does
not include specific demands that the Syrian government cooperate
with an investigation.
The
draft by the non-permanent members is based on the first
one, but drop demands that Syria hand over information on
its military operations on the day of the strike, replacing them with
language from a previous resolution urging cooperation on chemical
weapons investigations, diplomats said.
It
remained unclear if Russia or the other four permanent council
members would back the compromise presented as the United States
was weighing
military options in
Syria.
"UN
Security Council will no longer vote on the [resolution] on Syria
this evening. Consultations among council members are ongoing,"
British diplomat Stephen Hickey posted on Twitter.
At
least 86 people - including 27 children - died in the rebel-held town
of Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib province on Tuesday, according to the
UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Results
from post-mortems performed on victims point to exposure to the
deadly sarin nerve agent, according to Turkish health officials.
Britain,
France and the United States are permanent council members along with
Russia and China.
The
10 non-permanent members are Egypt, Japan, Senegal, Ukraine, Uruguay,
Bolivia, Ethiopia, Italy, Kazakhstan and Sweden.
"There
are efforts to find a way forward that might be a compromise,"
Swedish Ambassador Olof Skoog told reporters.
"We
are going to try to make sure we have a good discussion before there
are any votes."
Russia has rejected the proposed Western-backed resolution as "categorically unacceptable".
Russia has rejected the proposed Western-backed resolution as "categorically unacceptable".
The
Russian text calls for an investigation but requests that the council
approve the makeup of the team from the Organisation for the
Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) dispatched to Idlib, according
to the draft seen by AFP.
In
February, Syrian ally Russia, backed by China, cast its seventh veto
to protect Bashar al-Assad's government from council action, blocking
a bid by Western powers to impose sanctions over accusations of
chemical weapons attacks. China has vetoed six resolutions on Syria.
A
Security Council resolution needs nine votes in favor and no vetoes
by the United States, Britain, France, Russia or China to pass.
China's
UN Ambassador Liu Jieyi said on Thursday he hopes the Security
Council can reach consensus on a resolution condemning the reported
use of chemical weapons.
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