Syria denies differences with Saudi Arabia over Lebanon
4/3/2005 20:53
Syria denied reports that differences arose between Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad and Saudi Crown Prince Abdullah Bin Abdul-Aziz over Lebanon, the
official Syria Times newspaper reported Friday.
The paper was referring
to a Reuters report that quoted a Saudi official as saying that during talks in
Riyadh, capital of the Saudi kingdom, Saudi Arabia told Damascus to leave
Lebanon, otherwise bilateral ties would suffer setbacks.
"Abdullah told
Assad that 'Syria must start withdrawing soon, otherwise Saudi-Syrian relations
will go through difficulties,'" the official was quoted as saying.
Terming the Reuters news as "baseless", Syria Times said "the
non-mentioning of the Saudi official's name indicates the incredibility of the
content of the news story."
"The Saudi News Agency confirmed this fact,
... saying the talks were conducted in a very cordial atmosphere," the paper
added.
Syria has been under mounting international pressure to withdraw
its 14,000 troops from neighboring Lebanon, particularly after the assassination
of former Lebanese Prime Minister Rafik al-Hariri last month.
Lebanon's
opposition blamed Syria for Hariri's death and organized mass protest that
toppled Beirut's pro-Syrian government this week. Damascus denied any
involvement.
Assad will deliver a speech in the parliament "on current
political developments" on Saturday, the official SANA news agency said, without
giving further details.
The United States has repeated its demand for a
Syrian pullout, and Germany and Britain were the latest to join a call for
implementation of UN resolution 1559, which was adopted last September calling
on foreign forces to withdraw from Lebanon.
Russia, long one of Syria's
best friends, also said the troops should go.
"Syria should withdraw from
Lebanon, but we all have to make sure that this withdrawal does not violate the
very fragile balance which we still have in Lebanon, which is a very difficult
country ethnically," Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said.
However, Arab foreign ministers meeting in Cairo on Thursday refrained
from adding pressure on Syria, saying they were opting for quiet diplomacy by
individual Arab states.
Xinhua
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