Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov
BBC
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov says there is "absolutely" no
chance of Moscow telling Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to stand down.
He told the BBC that Russia was not in the "regime-change game".
Lavrov is due to visit London next week for talks with UK Foreign
Secretary William Hague.
Both countries say the Syrian crisis will top the agenda. Russia has
traditionally been a close ally of the Syrian government and is the
country's biggest arms supplier.
But while there is agreement that a negotiated settlement is the best
way forward, Lavrov told the BBC there was no question of Russia asking
President Assad to stand aside.
"I can only say it is not for us to decide who should lead Syria. It is
for the Syrians to decide," he said.
Asked if there was any chance of Russia urging President Assad to stand
aside, he said: "Absolutely not. You know that we are not in the
regime-change game. We are against interference in domestic conflicts."
Lavrov added that this was a point of principle and that, in any case,
President Assad has no intention of resigning.
Asked if there was any common ground between Britain and Russia on
Syria, Lavrov said: "I don't think we are far apart as far as the
eventual goal is concerned. We both want Syria to be united, to be
democratic. We both want the Syrian people to choose freely the way they
would like to run their country.
"That has been the Russian position... since the crisis started."
Lavrov said he welcomed some of the "constructive elements" in the
recent position of the Syrian National Coalition.
"The leader of the coalition has been speaking about his interest in
dialogue," Lavrov said.
"The government reiterated its readiness to do the same including with
those who are fighting on the ground. I believe we must encourage this
trend on both sides."
He said he would be discussing such developments in detail with William
Hague.
"Unless we all act in sync, telling the parties we don't want any
military solution, that we don't want any further loss of Syrian lives,
that we want them to start negotiating in earnest... this crisis will
continue and more blood will be shed," he said.
The UN estimates that about 70,000 people have died since the uprising against President Assad began nearly two years ago.
The UN estimates that about 70,000 people have died since the uprising against President Assad began nearly two years ago.
The UN also says about one million Syrians have now fled abroad, and
some 2.5 million have been forced from their homes inside the country.
On Thursday the medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres said Syria's
healthcare system had been wrecked by the conflict.
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