Jordan calls for Assad to step down

Jordan's King Abdullah has become the first Arab ruler to call for Syrian president Bashar Assad to step down.

Jordan's King Abdullah has become the first Arab ruler to call for Syrian president Bashar Assad to step down.

The statement came as Arabs closed ranks against Damascus with the Arab League voting to suspend Syria over attacks on protesters that the UN estimates have killed 3,500 people since mid-March.

"If Bashar (Assad) has the interest of his country, he would step down, but he would also create an ability to reach out and start a new phase of Syrian political life," King Abdullah told the BBC in an interview.

Earlier Syrian Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem accused Arab nations of conspiring against Damascus, calling Saturday's near-unanimous vote at the Arab League's headquarters in Cairo "shameful and malicious".

The vote was a stinging rebuke to a regime that prides itself as a bastion of Arab nationalism and left Syria increasingly isolated over its crackdown.

"We wanted the role of the Arab League to be a supporting role, but if the Arabs wanted to be conspirators, this is their business," al-Moallem said at a news conference in Damascus, betraying his country's deep alarm over the decision.

The vote to suspend Syria - a major boost for the Syrian opposition - put Damascus in direct confrontation with other Arab powers, including Qatar and Saudi Arabia, who were pushing for the suspension.

The unified Arab position also puts more pressure on the UN Security Council to impose sanctions, despite objections by Syrian allies Russia and China. Of the Arab League's 22 members, only Syria, Lebanon and Yemen voted against the suspension of Syria, with Iraq abstaining.

A similar Arab League decision to suspend Libya's membership earlier this year paved the way for the UN-mandated no-fly zone and Nato airstrikes that eventually brought down Muammar Gaddafi, but the group has stressed international intervention was not on the agenda in Syria.

Still, al-Moallem played on fears that the diplomatic campaign could escalate to Libya-style military action, saying Syria's army is far stronger than Libya's.

"They know that our valiant army has capabilities that they might not be able to tolerate if they are used," he said.

Assad asserts that extremists pushing a foreign agenda to destabilise Syria are behind the country's unrest, rather than true reform-seekers aiming to open the country's autocratic political system.

Syria has asked the Arab League to convene an emergency Arab summit to discuss the country's spiralling political unrest. Critics say that is another possible bid by Assad to buy time as he faces snowballing punitive action.

In Brussels EU foreign ministers decided to impose additional sanctions on 18 Syrians and organisations in response to the killings of protesters.

The names of those sanctioned will not be known until they are published in the EU's official journal in a day or two. Sanctions generally include visa and travel bans on people, the freezing of assets, and prohibitions on trade.

The EU has already placed sanctions on 56 Syrians and 19 organisations in its effort to get Assad to halt his bloody crackdown, and has banned the import into the EU of Syrian crude oil.

Russia, meanwhile, indicated that Assad still has the support of Moscow. Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Moscow opposes the Arab League's decision to suspend Syria.

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