West urges UN to take action in Syria

Western countries push for a tough resolution at a UN Security Council meeting on the crisis in Syria.

Western governments are lobbying for a UN resolution condemning the Syrian regime’s deadly crackdown as Russia said yesterday that it opposes the proposed text.
Western governments are lobbying for a UN resolution condemning the Syrian regime’s deadly crackdown as Russia said yesterday that it opposes the proposed text.

Arab League Secretary General Nabil al-Arabi will be asking the Council to back the League's new plan calling on President Bashar al-Assad to resign.

Western foreign ministers who back the Arab plan will try to overcome Russia's threat to veto any such resolution.

The diplomacy follows a day of particularly heavy bloodshed, with more than 100 people killed across Syria.

Activists say more than 40 civilians were among the dead in Monday's violence, but their claims cannot be independently verified as the international media are severely restricted inside Syria.

The UN has conceded it cannot keep track of the overall death toll, but estimates more than 5,400 people have been killed since the unrest began last March.

A Syrian Foreign Ministry official said Syria would "defeat the policies of chaos", state news agency Sana said.

The plan proposed by the Arab League, and backed by the US, UK and France, calls for Assad to hand power to a deputy who would then form a government of national unity.

Moscow said this is "not balanced" and would "leave open the possibility of intervention" in Syria's affairs.

The White House said on Monday that Assad had lost control of Syria, adding "he will go".

The US called on countries to decide where they stand on what it calls the Syrian regime's brutality.