Middle East
Annan wants clarification on Syria peace deal

Forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad gained ground in the cities of Idlib and Deraa, intensifying efforts to crush an uprising approaching its first anniversary with no negotiated settlement in sight.
The UN-Arab League envoy, Kofi Annan, said on Wednesday he had received a reply from Damascus to peace proposals that he had laid out at the weekend, and wanted further clarifications.
"But given the grave and tragic situation on the ground, everyone must realise that time is of the essence," Ahmad Fawzi, his spokesperson, said in a statement from Geneva.
Annan will brief the UN Security Council on Friday.
With the anniversary of the revolt falling on March 15 and diplomatic efforts to end the violence ineffective thus far, the Syrian army appears to be gaining the upper hand.
It has overrun some opposition strongholds and multiplying attacks others this week, sweeping opposition fighters from the northwestern city of Idlib and sent up to 130 tanks and armoured vehicles to the southern city of Deraa.
"They are hitting the birthplace of our revolution," a resident of Deraa, who only identified himself as Mohammed for fear of reprisals, said. The city lies adjacent to Jordan and was the site of some of the first protests against Assad a year ago.
"Houses are being hit with random bombardment from gunfire, RPGs and anti-aircraft missiles," he said of the city, in which 13 civilian and seven opposition fighters were killed on Wednesday, according to the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Sectarian divisions
Diplomats have warned that Syria, riven by sectarian divisions, will descend into a Balkans-style civil war unless a political solution can be found. Its economy is already in tatters and its ties with old Arab allies are in shreds.
Official Syrian media accused "armed terrorists" on Wednesday of massacring 15 civilians, including young children,
in a pro-government district of the central city of Homs, which has been the focal point of much fighting in recent weeks.
Reports from Syria cannot be independently verified as the authorities deny access to rights groups and journalists.
In the talks at the weekend, Annan presented Assad with a five-point plan to end the fighting.
Syria said on Wednesday it had given a "positive" response to the approach.
A Middle Eastern diplomat characterised the reply from Damascus as "not a 'No'". However, adding to the uncertainty, a senior Western diplomat in the region told the Reuters news agency that Damascus had rejected Annan's suggestions.
Thousands displaced
As the army crackdown progresses, a growing number of Syrians are seeking to escape the violence.
The UN refugee agency said on Tuesday that some 230,000 Syrians had fled their homes during the past 12 months, of whom around 30,000 have sought safety abroad.
Syrians displaced by the fighting streamed into Turkey early on Wednesday, saying they had been warned that their villages in the neighbouring province of Idlib would soon be targeted by the army.
"They are bombing Idlib. They are bombing the city. They have tanks and they have rockets," Abdul Samad, one of the refugees waiting for help at a fog-bound border post, said.
A Western diplomatic source told Reuters that, while Assad could snuff out pockets of resistance, the opposition fighters were simply pulling back and blending into the background.
"I feel the conflict will last a long time and fear that it will get a lot bloodier than it is now. That's why we have to keep pushing the diplomacy and the sanctions," he said.
The anti-government fighters have received little help from the Syrian opposition in exile, the Syrian National Council, who are yet to prove to foreign powers that they can lead and unify Assad's foes inside and outside the country.
On Tuesday, three prominent opposition members resigned from the Syrian National Council, saying they have given up on trying to make the group a more effective player.
Sheikh Nawaf al-Bashir, a well-known SNC member, told reporters on Wednesday that the SNC was "not effective and ... inactive on an international and domestic level," and called for the restructuring of the 270-member group.
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