UNITED NATIONS: Russia and China on Monday vetoed a UN Security Council resolution calling for a seven-day ceasefire in the embattled Syrian city of Aleppo.

Venezuela also voted against the text, while Angola abstained. The 11 other council members voted in favour.

The vote marked the sixth time Russia has blocked a council resolution on Syria since the conflict began in March 2011, and the fifth for China.

A close ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Moscow had expressed strong reservations about the text, the subject of weeks of negotiations.

In an eleventh-hour effort, Russia tried to postpone the vote until at least Tuesday, when the Americans and Russians are set to meet in Geneva.

But the text’s main backers — Paris, London and Washington — decided to go ahead anyway.

Russia says the Geneva talks will concern a plan for all rebel fighters to withdraw from eastern Aleppo, under siege by the regime. But the rebels have rejected the plan.

The two sides “are close to an agreement on the basic elements,” Russia’s UN ambassador Vitaly Churkin said. But deputy US envoy Michele Sison suggested there was no deal, accusing Churkin of using a “made-up alibi.” “We will not let Russia string along the Security Council,” she added.

“We will continue bilateral negotiations (with Russia) to relieve the suffering in Aleppo, but we have not reached a breakthrough because Russia wants to keep its military gains.”

Had the resolution been adopted, it would have been a “fragile glimpse of hope” and allowed to “save lives,” French ambassador Francois Delattre said.

He accused Russia of having “decided to take Aleppo regardless of the human cost.” But Chinese Ambassador Liu Jieyi said the council “should have continued negotiations,” criticising “politicisation of humanitarian issues.” In Paris, French Foreign Minister Jean-Marc Ayrault denounced “Russian obstruction.” The veto prevents the Security Council from “assuming its responsibilities to Syria’s civilian population, which faces the destructive madness of the Bashar al-Assad regime, as well as terrorist groups, starting with Daesh,” he said, using a term for the militant Islamic State group.

Published in Dawn December 7th, 2016

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