The secretary general of the Arab League has said its
approval of unprecedented sanctions has sent a very serious political message
to Syria.
Nabil al-Arabi told the CA that the Syrian government
could not carry on as if it was business as usual.
He said new sanctions recently agreed by Arab states
would come into force on Saturday unless Syria kept its promises.
Syria's foreign minister has described the sanctions as
"economic war".
In a CA interview at the Arab League headquarters in Cairo, Mr Arabi said the
Arab League had agreed to sanctions "with a heavy heart".
"We have sent a very serious political
message" is how the Arab League secretary general described the sanctions.
Mr Arabi said they were a message to Damascus: "You have to behave, you have
to stop what is going on, it's not business as usual. Something has to
happen."
'Heavy price'
The secretary general responded to Syrian Foreign
Minister Walid al-Mouallem's denunciation of the sanctions.
"No one wants to hurt the Syrian people," he
insisted. "No one wants to embarrass the Syrian government."
The measures are meant to sever most trade, exchanges
and investment between Syria
and the Arab world.
He said the Syrian people were paying "a very
heavy price" during an uprising now entering its ninth month. The UN says
violence has left more than 3,500 dead.
The secretary general would not be drawn on whether "time was running
out" for President Bashar al-Assad. But he spoke of efforts over the past
five months to convince him to "stop fighting, release prisoners,
reform".He said the Syrian government had a "different narrative" - that unrest was only taking place in border towns were there was foreign influence and that it was acting in self-defence.
Mr Arabi said sanctions would come into force on Saturday unless Damascus fulfilled a number of commitments, including permission for Arab League monitors to enter the country.
He recognized that past experience of international sanctions against countries like Iraq and Libya had shown they were not foolproof.
In Syria's case, neighbors like Lebanon and Iraq have abstained or dissociated themselves from the new resolutions.
But he was adamant that the Arab League could not discuss military support for the Syrian opposition. And he said all its resolutions were an effort to ensure there would be no foreign intervention in Syria.