Arab League peace plans for Syria

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In September 2011 – January 2012, the Arab League made several attempts to mediate in the Early insurgency phase of the Syrian civil war.

The Arab League presented for the first time a plan to resolve the crisis in Syria on 6 September 2011. Its provisions stipulate the holding of multi-candidate presidential elections in 2014, the date of the end of the current president's term. It also calls on the Syrian government to immediately stop acts of violence against civilians and to withdraw military manifestations from the cities. It also demands compensation for those affected, reparation for all forms of harm to citizens, and the release of detainees who did not participate in the violence. The initiative calls for launching a political dialogue between the president and Syrian opposition forces, such as the National Coordination Committee.[1]

Second attempt

On 2 November 2011, the Syrian government agreed to an Arab League peace plan to the effect that its army would no longer be deployed in violent crackdowns against peaceful demonstrators,[2][3] tanks would be withdrawn from the cities,[2][4] all political prisoners be released,[2][4] a dialogue with the opposition begun within two weeks,[4] and Arab League and foreign media allowed to monitor the situation.[2] When on 6 November at least 23 demonstrators were killed, the Arab League considered this a first breach of promise by Syria.[3]

On 12/13 November Syrian opposition groups counted 300 demonstrators and other opponents of the government allegedly killed since 2 November.[5] The Arab League therefore threatened to suspend Syria's membership of the League if it wouldn't execute the peace plan before 16 November.[6][7][8][5]

On 16 November, the Arab League formally suspended Syria's membership of the League.[9]

November additionally saw the Arab League impose economic sanctions on Syria. These sanctions saw asset freezes and travel restrictions on senior regime officials, a ban on Arab funding for development projects in Syria and restrictions in trading with Syria's central bank. Only Iraq and Lebanon refused to enact these sanctions.[10]

Third attempt

See also

References

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