CAIRO, Feb 6: Egyptian President Mohamed Morsi urged on Wednesday Syrian opposition groups to unify, as he addressed leaders of Islamic states at a summit that also focused on the battle against militants in Mali.
“The Syrian regime must draw lessons from history: it is the people who remain. Those who put their personal interests above the interests of their people will end up leaving,” Morsi told heads of state and representatives of the Organisation of Islamic Cooperation in Cairo.
Among them was Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, in the first visit to Egypt by an Iranian president since Iran’s 1979 Islamic revolution.
Iran is the chief regional backer of Syrian President Bashar Al Assad, while Egypt and Gulf powerhouse Saudi Arabia bitterly oppose Assad and support rebels seeking his ouster.
Morsi called on opposition parties not allied to Syria’s National Coalition, which is recognised by the international community, “to coordinate with this coalition and support their efforts for a unified approach... for democracy.”
The meeting gathers leaders of 26 of the OIC’s 57 states, with Morsi, Egypt’s first Islamist president, assuming the organisation’s rotating presidency.
Though Syria is not represented at the conference, much of the debate was expected to focus on the conflict which the UN says has killed more than 60,000 people in less than two years.
According to a draft resolution obtained by AFP, the gathering will call for “serious dialogue” between the Syrian opposition and government officials “not directly involved in oppression.”
The call for dialogue, drafted by foreign ministers after two days of preparatory meetings, will pile pressure on Assad to respond to a surprise offer of talks by Ahmed Moaz Al Khatib, leader of the National Coalition.
The document stresses the need to maintain “Syria’s territorial integrity and sovereignty,” while underlining that “the main responsibility for the continued violence falls on the Syrian government.”
The Syrian regime is committing “odious crimes... over which we cannot be silent,” said Saudi Crown Prince Salman bin Abdul Aziz.—AFP