Ban discusses Syria peace envoy with major powers
UNITED NATIONS - Agence France-Presse
In this image released by the United Nations, UN-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi speaks to the press on April 19, at the United Nations in New York. AFP PHOTO / UNITED NATIONS / Rick Bajornas
UN leader Ban Ki-moon discussed deadlocked efforts to end the Syria conflict with the major powers on May 2 amid mounting signs that peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi is to quit.Diplomats and UN spokesman Martin Nesirky confirmed the meeting but declined to say whether Brahimi has already told the United Nations and Arab League that he would be leaving.
A senior aide to the 79-year-old former Algerian foreign minister told AFP no announcement of any resignation was likely to be made until mid-May. Diplomats say however that Brahimi is determined to leave the post.
The permanent Security Council members - the United States, Russia, China, Britain and France - have all been urging Brahimi to stay in the position he took up in August last year after former UN leader Kofi Annan quit, diplomats said.
Brahimi wants to leave out of growing frustration with the deadlocked international efforts to end the two-year-old civil war in which the UN says well over 70,000 people have been killed.
"People are saying 'we want a political solution' but no one is taking serious steps towards that," said the aide, speaking to AFP in Cairo on condition of anonymity because of the topic's sensitivity.
Brahimi has been criticized by the Syrian opposition, and Assad's government said last week it would no longer cooperate with him.
But the Arab League decision to recognize the opposition Syrian National Coalition as the legitimate government of Syria was the final straw for the veteran UN troubleshooter, diplomats said.
Ban will 'not rush' to chose succesor
The aide said Brahimi has not yet resigned. "But as you know, he said he thinks about this every day," the aide said.
Ban and the ambassadors from the Security Council's five permanent members held informal discussions on Syria, said Nesirky.
"They discussed possible diplomatic moves to end the crisis. He briefed them on the latest developments relating to the chemical weapons investigation mission," said Nesirky.
"They also discussed the ever-worsening humanitarian situation inside Syria," he added.
Britain's ambassador Mark Lyall Grant confirmed to reporters that the peace envoy was discussed at the meeting but added "it was not just about Brahimi." Brahimi could keep a role as an advisor to the UN secretary general on Syria or the Middle East, according to envoys.
"The Syria conflict is so bad and the international divisions so entrenched that the secretary general now faces a very difficult decision on whether to replace Brahimi," said one senior UN diplomat.
"Ban will not rush to appoint a third person," added another Security Council diplomat. "You have had Annan, you have had Brahimi - are you going to get someone who can do better than them?"