By Tariq
Alhomayed
After months of violence and systematic repression
carried out by al-Assad's forces in Syria against the
unarmed Syrians, it was announced in Cairo that the
"Friends of the Syrian People" project would finally
see light in Tunisia, in the presence of Arab and
Western countries, and this matter implies severing
all ties with the al-Assad regime.
As I write this article the Arab ministerial
meeting in Cairo is yet to issue a closing statement,
but whatever its content, the most important point was
what was issued by the Saudi Foreign Minister Prince
Saul al-Faisal. He delivered a speech summarizing the
reality of the situation, particularly when he said
that initiatives with the Bashar al-Assad regime are
useless, and demanded to open communication channels
with the Syrian opposition, providing them with all
types of support. This will undoubtedly be a turning
point in dealing with the Syrian crisis, regardless of
any other Arab decisions issued by the Arab League.
Today, as long as there is a conference that will be
held in Tunisia under the name "Friends of the Syrian
People", this means that the Arabs have practically
decided to un-recognize the al-Assad regime, and have
decided to stand genuinely with the blood of the
innocent Syrians. There is no doubt that a mere
announcement is not the end of the matter, rather it
is the beginning of hard work in order to save the
innocent Syrians. Accepting the Tunisian request to
host the "Friends of the Syrian People" conference
came as a compromise between the desire of Turkey and
France to host the same event, just as the date of the
meeting - the 24th of this month – comes immediately
after the London Conference on Somalia that will be
held on the 23rd, thus enabling all parties concerned
to attend [both events].
The implications of Prince Saud al-Faisal's speech
yesterday, and Tunisia's invitation for the "Friends
of the Syrian People" conference, mean that the Arabs
now have ways of taking action in order to protect the
unarmed Syrians. Whilst the Russians tried to protect
the tyrant of Damascus, what has happened recently
means that the Arabs have assumed the higher ground,
and decided to take responsibility. Today the
Russians, and even the Chinese, can challenge the Arab
and Islamic world and the international community if
they want, but it will be a challenge in an open
theatre, and not in the narrow corridors of the
Security Council. The crimes taking place in Syria
cannot be tolerated or prolonged, whatever the
motivation or justification. The al-Assad regime has
lost its credibility and has no charters or covenants
in place; the regime is only fluent in the language of
distorting the facts. It distorts this with that and
broadcasts deliberately misleading news, all in the
attempt of trying to be clever. The simplest example
of this came from a source within the corridors of the
Arab League. [During the ministerial meeting], Iraq
openly said yesterday that everything you hear from
the al-Assad regime about Iraq providing it with
support, financing or concessions is simply not true;
they are merely leaks from the al-Assad regime's media
to distort the Arab scene!
Hence, the Saudi position, together with the call for
a conference of the "Friends of the Syrian People" in
Tunisia, both mean that the wheels have been put in
motion to put an end to the crimes being committed
against the unarmed Syrians. This will not be easy of
course, but it means that the hard work has begun.
Tariq Alhomayed is the Editor-in-Chief of Asharq
Al-Awsat, the youngest person to be appointed that
position. He holds a BA degree in Media studies from
King Abdul Aziz University in Jeddah, and has also
completed his Introductory courses towards a Master's
degree from George Washington University in Washington
D.C. He is based in London.