Egyptian President Mohamed Morsy supports calls by people in Syria
for President Bashar al-Assad to be tried for war crimes."The Syrian people
through their revolution and through the movement will -- when the
bloodshed stops -- move to a new stage where they will have an
independent parliament and a government of their choosing," Morsy,
Egypt's first freely elected leader, told CNN's Wolf Blitzer in Cairo.
"And then they will decide what they want to do to those who committed
crimes against them. It is the Syrian people who decide."
Al-Assad's effort to
crush anti-government protests in 2011 has turned into a bloody civil
war in which the United Nations estimates that more than 60,000 people
have been killed. In his first televised address since June, al-Assad said Sunday that Syria was under "an external attack" by
"extremists, who only know the language of killing and criminality."
Egyptian revolutionaries
toppled longtime strongman Hosni Mubarak in early 2011, and Morsy has
said Egypt will work for Arab and international support to replace
al-Assad. Asked whether he thought the Syrian leader should be tried
before the International Criminal Court for war crimes, Morsy said, "It
is not I who want this, but the Syrian people who want this."
"This phase is the phase
of the people," Morsy said. "Similar to what the Egyptian people wanted,
the Syrian people want it. And we support the Syrian people, and
they're going to win, and they have the will to win."
Morsy brokered the
November cease-fire that ended an eight-day conflict between Israel and
the Palestinian Islamist faction Hamas, which controls Gaza. Now, he has
invited the heads of the two major Palestinian factions to meet in
Cairo in hopes of building unity, a task he acknowledged won't be easy.
Morsy said he invited
Palestinian Authority President Mahmoud Abbas to meet with Khaled
Meshaal, the political leader of Hamas, who lives in Cairo. Hamas
controls Gaza, while Abbas's party, Fatah, controls the West Bank. The
two factions have clashed violently over the years.
The United States, Israel and the European Union list Hamas as a terrorist organization. The group has carried out numerous attacks, killing scores of civilians.
In the interview Sunday
with CNN, Morsy sought to assure viewers around the world, as well as
people in his own country, that he is committed to promoting democracy
and protecting minorities, including the country's Coptic Christians,
from discrimination.
Having spent time in the United States
-- he received a doctorate at the University of Southern California --
Morsy knows U.S. democracy and said he is committed to allowing free
speech.
No comments:
Post a Comment