Source:
AljazeeraFriday's protests were dedicated to calling for foreign intervention for the first time since the uprising began
Alain Juppe, France's foreign minister, has stepped up pressure on veto-wielding Russia to support a UN Security Council resolution against the Syrian government's violent crackdown on protests. Speaking during a visit to Australia on Sunday, Juppe said the UN's failure to condemn the actions of Syrian security forces against anti-government protesters was a "scandal".
The developments come after Nabil el-Araby,
the head of the Arab League, said he had reached an agreement on reforms with Bashar al-Assad, the Syrian president, during talks in Damascus on Saturday. They also followed Friday protests which activists dedicated to calling for international protection from security forces for the first time since the uprising began in March.
Syrian opposition representatives visited Moscow on Friday to press the Russian government to do more to support Syrian protesters. "The incomprehensible and contradictory position of the Russian leadership on what is happening in Syria could hurt Russia's image in the future," Ammar al-Qurabi, head of the Syrian opposition delegation, told a news conference.
Al-Qurabi's comments made clear that
Russia, a close ally of Syria's ruling Baath party with a naval maintenance facility in the country and a major arms contracts with the government, risks losing influence and potentially lucrative business deals in Syria if Assad is toppled.
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