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Putin offers cooperation to Syrian leader, backs efforts to stabilize country

Putin offers cooperation to Syrian leader, backs efforts to stabilize country
Russian President Vladimir Putin in Moscow, Russia, Thursday, March 20, 2025. (AP)
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Updated 20 March 2025

Putin offers cooperation to Syrian leader, backs efforts to stabilize country

Putin offers cooperation to Syrian leader, backs efforts to stabilize country
  • Russia, which has two strategically important military bases in Syria, was one of the main supporters of former President Bashar Assad

MOSCOW: Russian President Vladimir Putin has sent a message to Syria’s interim President Ahmed Al-Sharaa supporting efforts to stabilize the situation in the country and saying Russia is ready to engage in “practical cooperation,” Russian state news agency TASS reported on Thursday.
Putin confirmed “Russia’s continuing readiness to develop practical cooperation with the Syrian leadership on the whole range of issues on the bilateral agenda in order to strengthen traditionally friendly Russian-Syrian relations,” it quoted Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov as saying.
Syria has been rocked by a wave of sectarian killings. The Kremlin
said
earlier this month it wanted to see a united and “friendly” Syria because instability there could affect the whole of the Middle East.
Russia, which has two strategically important military bases in Syria, was one of the main supporters of former President Bashar Assad, who fled to Russia after he was toppled in December.


Israel resumes attacks on Hezbollah’s strongholds south, north of Litani River 

Israel resumes attacks on Hezbollah’s strongholds south, north of Litani River 
Updated 17 sec ago

Israel resumes attacks on Hezbollah’s strongholds south, north of Litani River 

Israel resumes attacks on Hezbollah’s strongholds south, north of Litani River 
  • Nawaf Salam: ‘How is it possible that Israel continues to practice intimidation and attacks?’ 
  • Lebanese Army Command said it had recorded ‘more than 4,500 violations of Lebanese sovereignty by land, air, and sea since the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement came into effect’

BEIRUT: The Israeli military launched a series of airstrikes on Thursday evening targeting areas south and north of the Litani River, after issuing urgent warnings for residents to stay away from six designated locations. 

This tactic mirrors the approach followed during the Israeli war on Hezbollah that began in October 2023 and which ended with a ceasefire agreement that took effect on Nov. 27, 2024.

The airstrikes hit sites around the town of Dibbin and three locations in Mays Al-Jabal, with initial reports indicating that a Syrian national was injured in the raids. A house in Kfar Tibnit was also targeted.

A second wave of raids struck areas in the Tyre district, specifically Burj Qalaya and Al-Shahabiya. 

“The timing of the attacks is striking, as it coincides with Hezbollah’s preparations to commemorate the first anniversary of the assassinations of its two Secretary-Generals Hassan Nasrallah and Hashem Safieddine,” a Lebanese security source told Arab News. “This is an attempt to remind the party that Israel continues to pursue it.” 

The source expected Israeli attacks to escalate until the first anniversary of Nasrallah’s death on Sept. 27. 

Prime Minister Nawaf Salam was informed of the Israeli threats and subsequently of the attacks during a Cabinet session, and said: “The Lebanese government’s position is commitment to the cessation of hostilities and the government’s engagement in the mechanism’s meetings.”

Salam said during the session: “The legitimate question today is: Where is Israel’s commitment to these mechanisms?

“How can it be possible to continue to practice intimidation and attacks while these meetings are supposed to ensure the full implementation of Resolution 1701 and the cessation of hostilities?”

The Cabinet called on the international community — especially the signatories of the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement — to apply maximum pressure on Israel to immediately halt its attacks and return to diplomatic negotiations. Under the terms of the mechanism and the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement, Israel committed to several obligations, including withdrawing from the Lebanese territories it still occupies, ceasing all attacks, and releasing prisoners.

The Israeli military confirmed the attacks on Lebanon in a statement, claiming that it struck “military targets belonging to Hezbollah.”

Israeli military spokesman Avichay Adraee claimed in a video posted on social media that the attacks were “in response to Hezbollah’s prohibited attempts to rebuild its activities in the area.”

Adraee addressed the residents of the targeted areas before the strikes, saying: “You are located in buildings used by the terrorist Hezbollah. For your own safety, you are obliged to evacuate these buildings and adjacent buildings immediately and move at least 500 meters away from them. Remaining in these buildings exposes you to danger.”

The Kfar Tibnit-Nabatieh Al-Fawqa road experienced heavy traffic toward the city of Nabatieh and neighboring towns due to the displacement of threatened residents. The road leading to Kfar Tibnit was closed for public safety.

The Israeli military also targeted the Baalbek area on Wednesday night with airstrikes that killed Hussein Saifo Sharif and wounded several other people. The Israeli army claimed that Sharif was “a major arms dealer and supplier operating from Lebanon to direct cells inside Syria planning to carry out plots against Israel.” It added: “His activities constitute a violation of the understandings between Israel and Lebanon.”

The Lebanese Army Command said it had recorded “more than 4,500 violations of Lebanese sovereignty by land, air, and sea since the Cessation of Hostilities Agreement came into effect … including the launching of Molotov cocktails and the bombing of homes.”

It explained that Thursday’s attacks “on southern villages and civilians in populated areas resulted in deaths and injuries,” and warned that “these attacks and violations hinder the army’s deployment in the south, and their continuation will hinder the implementation of its plan, starting from the area south of the Litani River.”

It added: “The Army Command is monitoring these violations in coordination with the Cessation of Hostilities Monitoring Committee and UNIFIL forces.”

The body revealed that, as part of “monitoring engineering survey operations in the southern regions, a specialized military unit found and dismantled a camouflaged spy device that the Israeli enemy had placed in the Labbouneh-Tyre area.”


Inaction on Gaza is complicity in Israel’s genocide, UN Commission of Inquiry chair Navi Pillay tells Arab News

Inaction on Gaza is complicity in Israel’s genocide, UN Commission of Inquiry chair Navi Pillay tells Arab News
Updated 16 min 30 sec ago

Inaction on Gaza is complicity in Israel’s genocide, UN Commission of Inquiry chair Navi Pillay tells Arab News

Inaction on Gaza is complicity in Israel’s genocide, UN Commission of Inquiry chair Navi Pillay tells Arab News
  • Pillay says report shows direct and public incitement by senior Israeli officials — evidence of intent behind genocidal acts
  • Underscores the Genocide Convention requires states to take tangible action, not just issue statements of concern

NEW YORK CITY: Two years into the war in Gaza, a landmark report from the UN Commission of Inquiry has shaken the international community. For the first time, a UN body has formally concluded that Israel is committing genocide against the Palestinian people.

As diplomatic activity intensifies ahead of the 80th session of the UN General Assembly, the report is dominating closed-door briefings, drawing attention from ambassadors, journalists and diplomats alike. Many are calling it a watershed moment in the decades-old conflict. 

Palestinians watch as the Mhanna tower collapses amid heavy smoke, during an Israeli strike in the Tal El-Hawa neighbourhood of Gaza City on September 14, 2025. (AFP)

Speaking to Arab News from Geneva, the commission’s chair, Navi Pillay — a former UN high commissioner for human rights and former president of the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda — offered not only legal clarity but moral urgency.

Commenting just two days after the report’s release, she reflected on its reception, the obligations of states and why the world can no longer afford to remain silent.

“There has been a huge response to this report,” Pillay said. “We expected that, because this is the first UN voice identifying what’s happening — what happened and what’s happening — as genocide.

“I’m here in Geneva, and all the waiters seem to have seen the media. It just warms my heart that ordinary people were waiting for some clarity … they were waiting for the voice of the UN on this.”

The report is the product of two years of painstaking investigation. “We worked so hard to get this done — but we had to be thorough on this,” said Pillay.

But for many, the report’s conclusions come as little surprise, merely confirming what they already knew. “Many people said to me, ‘If we can see it for ourselves on television — why are you only calling it genocide now?’ People are owed explanations for this,” she added.

The report lands amid a shift in global consciousness. From street protests to parliaments, calls for an end to the war are growing louder. In Washington, 21 members of Congress have now publicly stated that Israel is committing genocide against Palestinians.

Asked whether this signals a turning point in global perceptions, Pillay did not mince her words. “States will be shaken,” she said. “Because this is the Genocide Convention. Every member state — they don’t even have a choice — is obligated to prevent and to punish genocide.

“Now of course, the ideal is to wait for the International Court of Justice decision, but that’s not clear yet. In the meantime, how will they prevent genocide if you’re going to not recognize it?”

Pillay’s warning to governments is stark: Silence is not neutrality — it is complicity. “If states remain silent and take no action, then that is not being neutral,” she said. “That is being involved in and being complicit in the commission of genocide. So that’s a very serious impact on states.”

So what must UN member states do now, particularly those supplying weapons and diplomatic cover to Israel? 

Israeli military vehicles manoeuvre near the Israel-Gaza border. (AFP)

“States know what tools they have to take action,” said Pillay. “They’ve done it in other situations — and very fast, too, because it suits them. International law says you can’t have double standards. You have to have the same standard.

“The Genocide Convention is very clear — you must take action. You can’t just recall ambassadors and think you’ve fulfilled your obligation. You must act to prevent genocide — through prosecution, sanctions or other tangible means.”

She added: “You yourself have to take steps to stop it. I’m hoping that they will get together, discuss this, and come up with strategies.”

The UN Commission of Inquiry refrained from making too many specific recommendations, Pillay said, because “those are political decisions that must be made by states.”

“But, and this is what I am emphasizing, once it’s under the Genocide Convention, you can’t just do little things like withdrawing your ambassador. You have to actively, for instance, prosecute or actually see how you can help prevent genocide continuing in Gaza.”

Under a 1948 international treaty known as the Genocide Convention, genocide is defined not only by the acts committed, such as mass killings, but by the specific intent — dolus specialis — to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial or religious group.

This definition means genocide is one of the hardest crimes to prosecute. Prosecutors must establish not just that atrocities occurred, but that they were carried out with the deliberate goal of eradicating a particular group.

The difficulty lies in the fact that intent is rarely stated outright. Political and military leaders seldom make explicit declarations of genocidal purpose.

Instead, prosecutors must infer intent from indirect sources — patterns of conduct, official policies, systematic targeting of civilians and the broader context in which the violence occurs.

However, Pillay believes the case with Israel is different. The Commission found that proving intent has been unusually straightforward. 

According to Pillay, unlike in most genocide cases, intent here was openly declared by political and military leaders, often in public statements.

These were backed by actions that systematically targeted civilians and destroyed the conditions necessary for Palestinian life in Gaza.

In this instance, the evidence of intent was not hidden — it was overt, repeated and matched by consistent patterns of conduct on the ground.

“Let me first point out that I have experience of judging genocide,” Pillay said. “I was the judge and president of the UN International Criminal Tribunal of Rwanda.

“That was the very first judgment in the world of genocide. And I assure you, it was much harder. We didn’t have the kind of help that we have now.”

Displaced Palestinians flee Gaza City. (AFP)

Pillay gave multiple examples of statements by Israeli leaders that she says reflected genocidal intent.

“As early as Oct. 7, 2023, Prime Minister (Benjamin) Netanyahu vowed to inflict ‘a mighty vengeance’ on all of the places which Hamas is deployed, hiding and operating in. ‘We will turn them into rubble,’ he said. He told residents of Gaza, ‘leave now because we will operate forcefully everywhere.’

“The use of the phrase ‘wicked city’ in the same statement implied that he saw the whole city of Gaza as responsible and a target for vengeance. He made no distinction between combatants and civilians — which the law requires them to do — knowing Palestinians have nowhere to go. 

“To us, that’s the cruelest part. I have studied very many conflicts, and the victims or even the perpetrators knew they could go to neighboring countries. Here, Palestinians are locked in. Where are they expected to go?”

She cited further statements from former Defense Minister Yoav Gallant. On Oct. 9, 2023, Gallant announced a complete siege on Gaza claiming Israel was fighting “human animals” and must act accordingly. 

In a speech to security forces the next day, he said: “Gaza won’t return to what it was before. There will be no Hamas. We will eliminate everything. If it doesn’t take one day, it will take weeks or even months. We will reach all places.”

People mourn over the bodies of Palestinian journalists Moaz Abu Taha (L), photojournalist Hussam al-Masri, a Reuters contractor, (C), and Al-Jazeera photojournalist Mohamed Salama, (R), who were killed in an Israeli strike on Nasser hospital in Khan Yunis. (AFP/File)

President Isaac Herzog, meanwhile, said “it’s an entire nation out there” that is responsible.

“These have become much more blatant in announcing their policy. They didn’t hide it,” Pillay said. “And furthermore, their own soldiers were posting these videos of their acts, as well as the statements of their leaders and the instructions from the military heads.”

Beyond statements of intent, the report also referenced several acts that constitute genocide.

“Where is the military objective in killing children?” Pillay asked. “Where is the military objective in killing people who reach the aid site of that Gaza Humanitarian Foundation, which took over from UNRWA, and then the people were starving — starvation being a weapon of genocide?”

The Commission posed these questions directly to Israel, which, like all states, has a legal obligation to prevent and punish genocide. It requested details of any investigations Israel may have conducted into the alleged acts.

But, Pillay said, Israel has not cooperated with the Commission, despite being bound to do so by the International Court of Justice.

“They never let us in, which they had been ordered to do by the ruling of the International Court of Justice. We could have talked with many more victims firsthand … But they didn’t do that.”

The Commission found evidence to prove Israel had committed four of the five genocidal acts defined by the Genocide Convention.

The four acts are killing, causing serious bodily or mental harm, deliberately inflicting conditions of life calculated to bring about the destruction of a group in whole or in part, and imposing measures intended to prevent births.

“We looked at the direct attack on the only one fertility clinic in Gaza, where apparently they had 4,000 embryos saved, and the Israeli forces directly shot at the nitrogen tanks that kept the embryos alive. And now they’re all destroyed,” said Pillay.

Smoke rises following Israeli strikes during a military operation, in Gaza City, September 18. (AFP)

“So that would be an example of measures (not only) to prevent births, (but) also in fact, positively destroying, to ensure the end of the Palestinian population and their right to live.”

Governments and UN agencies are under mounting pressure to say Israel’s conduct in Gaza amounts to genocide.

On Tuesday, UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres condemned the “systematic destruction” of Gaza City, but when asked whether he concurs with the Commission’s conclusion that genocide was occurring, he insisted it was for the international courts to decide.

“As I’ve said, time and time again, in these and different, similar circumstances, it is not in the attributions that the secretary-general to do the legal determination of genocide,” he told a press briefing at UN headquarters. That belongs to the adequate judicial entities, namely the International Court of Justice.”

Asked about the secretary-general’s reluctance to use the word “genocide,” Pillay responded with nuance and urgency.

“I used to say the same, too,” she said. “I used to say to media, don’t call it genocide, wait for the court to determine. But what’s different now is that this genocide is occurring right now. It’s been going on for two years. It’s occurring in front of our eyes.

“For me, as a judge who used to have the attitude of ‘wait’ — I am asking: How can states act to prevent genocide? How can they punish people who are committing genocide if they have to wait for a genocide determination from the court?”

She also pointed to the ICJ’s order that there are “plausible indications” genocide is taking place, adding: “That is also new. We’ve never had that kind of clear directive from the court before. So these would all influence me.

“And obviously the massive evidence that’s been gathered, which is now available to the UN, should help them to reexamine the positions they adopted, as I did.”

The evidence, she said, should push the UN to act.

A journalist holds the blood-covered camera belonging to Palestinian photojournalist Mariam Dagga, a journalist who freelanced for AP since the start of the war and who was killed in an Israeli strike. (AFP)

“It’s not a matter of choice. They’re obliged — each country — to take steps to prevent and punish. The UN has a bigger role here to ensure that access to justice is a priority for victims all over.”

Israel’s foreign ministry said it “categorically” rejected the report, describing it as “distorted and false,” and accusing its authors of parroting Hamas propaganda. Pillay’s response is sharp and unequivocal.

“I wish I could say to them — and I wish they would point out to me — where in our extensive 80-page report we are relying on Hamas for the information,” she said.

“We were the first UN body, on Oct. 10, 2023, to condemn the Hamas attacks. We said that they constitute war crimes and crimes against humanity. So it’s just absurd to call us Hamas.”

Asked whether she believes Israel will ever face accountability for its actions in Gaza, Pillay said it was vital to document crimes, even if justice took years to achieve.

“I never thought apartheid in South Africa would end in my lifetime, but it has — mainly through the collective pressure of civil society, not so much governments,” she said. “As we saw in Cambodia, 20 years after the conflict, the UN set up a tribunal.”

A Palestinian woman holds the hand of a child that was killed in an Israeli strike. (AFP)

She recognizes the public frustration. “I can understand the public out there. They tell me that too: ‘Are you wasting your time with this?’”

But, she insists, the report matters: “For the Palestinians who have been victims of this, it’s very important to stress to states. And civil society is in a good position to pressure their own governments — not only the entire world, but in particular the region where Palestine is being denied.”

 


Egypt says stolen pharaoh’s bracelet melted down, sold for $4,000

Egypt says stolen pharaoh’s bracelet melted down, sold for $4,000
Updated 18 September 2025

Egypt says stolen pharaoh’s bracelet melted down, sold for $4,000

Egypt says stolen pharaoh’s bracelet melted down, sold for $4,000
  • Investigations showed a restoration specialist working at the museum stole the bracelet on September 9 while on duty
  • The bracelet was then melted down along with other scrap gold

CAIRO: Egyptian police said on Thursday they arrested a museum employee and three alleged accomplices after a priceless ancient gold bracelet was stolen from Cairo’s Egyptian Museum, sold for about $4,000 and then melted down.
The 3,000-year-old bracelet, a gold band adorned with lapis lazuli beads, dated back to the reign of Amenemope, a pharaoh of Egypt’s 21st Dynasty (1070-945 BC).
The priceless artefact had been kept under lock and key when it disappeared, a few weeks before it was meant to be exhibited in Italy.
Museum staff reported it missing from a metal safe in the museum’s conservation lab on Saturday, a statement from Egypt’s interior ministry said.
Investigations showed a restoration specialist working at the museum stole the bracelet on September 9 while on duty.
A silver trader in central Cairo helped her facilitate the sale, the police said, first to a gold dealer for 180,000 Egyptian pounds ($3,735), who then sold it to a worker at a gold foundry for 194,000 pounds ($4,025).
The bracelet was then melted down along with other scrap gold, the ministry said.
The suspects were taken into custody and confessed to the crime, according to authorities.
Security camera footage released by Egyptian authorities shows a bracelet being exchanged for a wad of cash in a shop, before the buyer cuts it in two. However, the blurry images suggest the bracelet lacks the distinctive lapis lazuli bead seen in official photos shared a day earlier.

- Treasures of the Pharaohs -

Egyptian media outlets had earlier reported the loss was discovered during an inventory check ahead of the “Treasures of the Pharaohs” exhibition scheduled in Rome next month.
Under Egyptian law, stealing an antiquity with the intent to smuggle it is punishable by life imprisonment and a fine of 1 to 5 million Egyptian pounds (around $20,000-$100,000), while damaging or defacing antiquities carries up to seven years in prison and a fine of up to 1 million pounds.
Jean Guillaume Olette-Pelletier, an Egyptologist, told AFP the bracelet was discovered in Tanis, in the eastern Nile delta, during archaeological excavations in the tomb of King Psusennes I, where Amenemope had been reburied after the plundering of his original tomb.
“It’s not the most beautiful, but scientifically it’s one of the most interesting” objects, said the expert, who has worked in Tanis.
The bracelet had a fairly simple design, he said, but was made of a gold alloy designed to resist deformation.
To the Ancient Egyptians, the precious metal represented the “flesh of the gods,” while lapus lazuli — imported from what is now Afghanistan — evoked their hair.
Egypt’s cultural institutions have been hit by similar high-profile thefts in the past.
Vincent van Gogh’s “Poppy Flowers,” worth $55 million, was stolen from a Cairo museum in 1977, recovered a decade later, and stolen again in 2010. It remains missing.
Last month, an Egyptian man was sentenced to six months in jail in the United States for smuggling nearly 600 looted artefacts onto the international market.
After Egypt’s 2011 revolution, looters took advantage of the chaos to raid museums and archaeological sites, with thousands of stolen objects later surfacing in private collections worldwide.
The theft from the Egyptian Museum in Tahrir Square, one of the oldest in the country, comes just weeks before the anticipated November 1 opening of Egypt’s new Grand Egyptian Museum, a major cultural project near the Giza Pyramids that has been years in the making.


UN envoy for Syria to step down after six years in role 

UN envoy for Syria to step down after six years in role 
Updated 25 min 15 sec ago

UN envoy for Syria to step down after six years in role 

UN envoy for Syria to step down after six years in role 
  • During the civil war, Pedersen was one of several UN envoys that led political missions aimed at negotiating a peaceful solution between the Assad regime and its opponents

NEW YORK: The United Nations Special Envoy for Syria Geir Pedersen announced on Thursday that he would step down “in the near future” after more than six years in the role and as Syria undergoes a historic transition following the ouster of former leader Bashar Assad last year.

He told the UN Security Council that Secretary-General Antonio Guterres had accepted his resignation.

“It has been my intention for quite some time to move on for personal reasons after a long period of service,” Pedersen told the 15-member council.

“My experience in Syria has affirmed an enduring truth — that sometimes it’s darkest before the dawn. For so long, progress seemed absolutely impossible, until suddenly it came.”

Assad was ousted by a rebel offensive in December that ended 14 years of civil war that erupted with protests against him, and 50 years of family rule by him and his father Hafez before him.

“Few have endured suffering as profound as the Syrians, and few have demonstrated such resilience and determination,” Pedersen said.

“Today, Syria and the Syrian people have a new dawn, and we must ensure that this becomes a bright day. They deserve this so much.”

During the war, Pedersen was one of several UN envoys that led political missions aimed at negotiating a peaceful solution between the Assad regime and its opponents.

But the Islamist-led government that replaced Assad has kept the UN mission at an arm’s length, with officials insisting that there was little need for an internationally negotiated political transition now that Assad had been toppled.

“Being a special envoy for any conflict, let alone one that we Syrians know, is no easy job,” Syria’s UN Ambassador Ibrahim Olabi told the Security Council, adding that Pedersen “departs on a note of hope, on a success story.”

He said Syria looks forward to “engaging with the Secretary-General and all of you in working with his successor in a way that preserves Syrian sovereignty and fulfills the aspiration of the Syrian people.”


People of Syria want abuses acknowledged and addressed, outgoing UN envoy says

People of Syria want abuses acknowledged and addressed, outgoing UN envoy says
Updated 25 min 21 sec ago

People of Syria want abuses acknowledged and addressed, outgoing UN envoy says

People of Syria want abuses acknowledged and addressed, outgoing UN envoy says
  • Geir Pedersen warns the political transition in the country remains at a critical juncture; success requires inclusive governance, international support and end to foreign interference
  • He welcomes Syria’s new permanent representative to the UN, and acknowledges the complex legacy inherited by interim authorities after fall of the Assad regime

NEW YORK CITY: The UN’s outgoing special envoy for Syria, Geir Pedersen, told the Security Council on Thursday that Syria’s fragile political transition remains at a critical juncture.

Success will depend on inclusive governance, significant international support and a halt to foreign interference, he warned.

And amid simmering tensions in parts of the country following violent clashes over the summer, the Syrian people want to see that abuses are properly acknowledged and addressed in accordance with international standards, he added.

Pedersen unexpectedly resigned on Thursday after almost seven years as the organization’s representative to the war-torn country.

“I wish to let the council know that I have informed the secretary-general of my intention to step down after more than six-and-a-half years serving as United Nations Special Envoy for Syria, and he has graciously accepted my request,” he told the council.

Pedersen welcomed the country’s newly appointed permanent representative to the UN, Ibrahim Al-Olabi, and acknowledged the complex legacy inherited by the interim authorities after the collapse of the Assad regime in December last year.

“They have inherited not just the ruins of shattered buildings but the deeper wreckage of a battered social fabric, decayed institutions and a hollowed-out economy,” Pedersen said. “Syria urgently requires international material assistance … and political stability.”

He stressed the need for broader regional and international cooperation to help revive the private sector and support domestic reforms, reiterated calls for sanctions relief, and emphasized the need for ongoing foreign intervention to cease.

Recent actions by the Israeli military inside Syria, including reported strikes and commando operations, were “unacceptable,” Pedersen added as he called for Syrian sovereignty and territorial integrity to be fully respected.

Turning to the situation in the city of Sweida, where hundreds were killed when heavy fighting between Druze and Bedouin broke out two months ago, Pedersen said a ceasefire agreement announced in July has largely held, and recent US-Jordanian-Syrian peace efforts have produced a road map that addresses critical issues such as humanitarian access, reconstruction, detainees and reconciliation.

However, a local committee aligned with an influential Druze leader, Sheikh Hikmet Al-Hijri, has rejected the plan, calling instead for “self-administration or secession.”

Pedersen stressed the need for dialogue, confidence-building exercises, and state action that ensures the protection of all communities, not threats. He welcomed a call by the Syrian government for a UN Commission of Inquiry into the recent events in Sweida as a step toward accountability and cooperation.

He also called for the Syrian national committee investigating unrest on the coast earlier this year to publish its findings, and addressed recent tensions in the Sumariya neighborhood of Damascus, where armed raids linked to interim authority-affiliated security forces have prompted concerns about protection of civilians.

“The public needs to see that abuses are both acknowledged and addressed in accordance with international standards,” Pedersen said.

He underscored the central role of transitional justice to the overall political process in Syria, and offered UN support for national commissions addressing this issue and that of missing persons.

In northeastern Syria, discussions between the interim authorities and the Syrian Democratic Forces continue under a March 10 agreement, focusing on military integration and confidence-building. Pedersen characterized the talks as “positive” though the challenges remain significant.

Security concerns persist in areas held by the interim authority, he added, with unresolved issues around disarmament, reintegration and foreign fighters.

Pedersen also called for renewed efforts to repatriate foreign nationals from Al-Hol refugee camp, and underlined the readiness of the UN to support such processes.

He noted that Syria still lacks a legislature and that preparations were underway for the indirect election of two-thirds of the members of an interim People’s Assembly, though a date for this has yet to be confirmed. Pedersen emphasized the importance of transparency and inclusion in this process, especially for women and marginalized communities.

“This must not be an exercise in rewarding loyalty but in ensuring genuine representation,” he said.

He warned that exclusion of dissenting voices could undermine the entire transition, including the development of a constitution and eventual national elections.

Throughout the briefing, Pedersen emphasized the critical importance of inclusivity and national consensus, cautioning that a mishandled transition could plunge Syria into renewed conflict and foreign intervention.

“Viewed by the standard of Syria’s challenges, we can point to remarkable changes in a short period,” he said. “But the key determinant of success has been genuine inclusion.”

President Ahmad Al-Sharaa will attend the high-level segment of the UN General Assembly in New York next week, the first Syrian president to do so since 1967.

“Only dialogue, not force, can unite Syria,” Pedersen quoted Al-Sharaa as saying.