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Russia's Lavrov holds talks with Assad

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Foreign minister says Syrian president committed to ending violence Russia's foreign minister has declared in Damascus that the Syrian government is committed to ending the country's violence.

Sergei Lavrov made the remark after holding talks in the Syrian capital on Tuesday with President Bashar al-Assad.

However, in a sign that other countries were not so confident, Gulf Arab states joined France and Italy in withdrawing their ambassadors from Damascus.
 
And in the central Syrian city of Homs, the military continued its assault on opposition fighters. Witnesses said tanks and snipers began firing on residential areas from dawn for a fifth straight day.

Dozens of people have been killed in the ongoing military assault, according to activists.
 
Opposition groups say at least 6,000 people have died since the anti-Assad uprising began 11 months ago.
 
Lavrov's visit to Damascus comes three days after Russia and China vetoed any UN-backed measures against the Assad government over its crackdown on protesters.
 
After holding what he called a "very useful meeting", Lavrov described Assad as "fully committed" to ending the bloodshed.
 
"We [Russia] confirmed our readiness to act for a rapid solution to the crisis based on the plan put forward by the Arab League," Lavrov said.
 
Large crowds
 
Russian news agencies quoted Lavrov as saying Syria also is ready to see an enlarged Arab League mission in the country.
 
Earlier in the day, Syrian state television showed large crowds greeting Lavrov as his convoy drove to Damascus from the airport.
 
Sergei Srokan, a Russian political analyst said, in finding the moderates in the opposition, Lavrov could show that "all those calling for President Assad to immediately step down don't represent even the whole of the Syrian opposition".
 
Both Russia and China have faced international condemnation after vetoing the UN resolution. Lavrov said before his visit that condemnation of the veto had verged on "hysteria".
 
Russia has sought "the swiftest stabilisation of the situation in Syria on the basis of the swiftest implementation of democratic reforms whose time has come", he said.
 
Nevertheless, the international divisions appeared to be only widening, with Italy recalling its ambassador from Syria for consultations on Tuesday.
 
It said its embassy would remain open and "continue to follow with maximum attention developments in an extremely grave crisis".
 
Announcing their decision to withdraw their ambassadors from Damascus immediately", the Gulf states said "the rising tide of killing and violence in Syria is showing no mercy towards women, children or the elderly".
 
In a statement, issued from Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, the six-nation Gulf Co-operation Council said the Syrian government 's actions could only be described as "ruthless massacres against unarmed people."
 
The moves followed similar announcements from the US, which shut its embassy in Damascus, and Belgium and Britain, which recalled their ambassadors on Monday.
 
Turkish initiative
 
In another Syria-related development, Turkey said it was preparing a new initiative to end the country's bloodshed.
 
Recep Tayyip Erdogan, the Turkish prime minister, said on Tuesday that the initiative would involve countries that stood by the people and not the Assad government.
 
He described the Security Council resolution veto as "a fiasco for the civilised world".

"Those turning a blind eye to what's going on and those not reacting the way they should will suffer the consequences as if they were fuelling the bloodshed themselves," he said.
 
He criticised the military-led assault on Homs, comparing it to the 1982 Hama massacre in which 17,000 - 40,000 Syrians are said to have died.

"No one has been called to account for the Hama massacre - but you can be sure it will be asked for Homs sooner or later," Erdogan said.
 
Despite the diplomatic pressure, there was no sign of a let-up in the government's military crackdown on Homs.
 
Speaking on Tuesday, Abu Abdo Alhomsy, an activist of a revolutionary council in the city, said: "The rocket shelling didn't stop through the night. The rocket shelling and the mortar bombing is all around Homs.
 
"The people don't have bread to eat. The condition in the neighbourhood is quite miserable. Snipers are everywhere. We are just waiting to be killed. We don't know what to do."
 
Syrian authorities, who have denied firing on houses, said security forces killed "tens of terrorists" in Homs on Monday morning. An interior ministry statement said six members of the security forces were killed in the clashes.
 
Syrian state television has accused "armed gangs" of being behind the latest violence in Homs.

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