China welcomes US-Russia deal on Syria

September 15, 2013 02:48 pm | Updated December 04, 2021 11:21 pm IST - BEIJING

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius listens to a reporter's questions during a press conference in Beijing on Sunday.

French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius listens to a reporter's questions during a press conference in Beijing on Sunday.

China on Sunday welcomed a Russia-U.S. agreement on securing and destroying Syria’s chemical weapons, saying it was a peaceful solution to the stockpile issue that could ease the tense situation in the war-torn country.

In a diplomatic breakthrough that averts the threat of U.S. military action against Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime for now, American and Russian diplomats in Geneva agreed on Saturday on a deal to secure and destroy Syria’s chemical weapons.

“We believe the framework agreement will ease the current tense situation that may be triggered at any moment in Syria and creates new prospects for resolving the chemical weapon issue in Syria through peaceful means,” said Foreign Minister Wang Yi.

Mr. Fabius said later that questions over the deal remained, including what measures should be taken if the Syrian government fails to adhere to it.

France firmly backs the Syrian rebels and has strategic and historic interests in the region. It urged military action after a chemical attack on Aug. 21 that Paris and Washington blame on Mr. Assad’s government.

In contrast, China and Russia have consistently blocked resolutions at the U.N. Security Council aimed at sanctioning Mr. Assad’s regime.

After Sunday’s meeting, the French foreign minister said the deal on destroying Syria’s chemical weapons was “a significant step forward, but it’s a first stage.”

“On one hand, we are going to move forward with the destruction of chemical weapons bravo but on the other hand, hundreds of deaths every day are mounting in Syria and that’s also what we must tackle, that is to say find a political solution to the Syrian crisis,” Mr. Fabius said.

Mr. Fabius also said a report by U.N. inspectors on last month’s chemical weapons attack on the outskirts of Damascus would be published Monday.

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