Brahimi: Solution to Syria crisis must come in 2013

UN-Arab League envoy for Syria says solution still possible as Turkish PM predicts regime change, hints "end is approaching."

Arab League Syria envoy Lakhdar Brahimi 370 (R) (photo credit: REUTERS)
Arab League Syria envoy Lakhdar Brahimi 370 (R)
(photo credit: REUTERS)
CAIRO - The international peace envoy for Syria said the situation in the country was deteriorating sharply but a solution was still possible under the terms of a peace plan agreed in Geneva in June.
He said the state would collapse without a solution, reiterating warnings that the country could turn into "hell" and a new Somalia.
"I say that the solution must be this year: 2013, and, God willing, before the second anniversary of this crisis," Lakhdar Brahimi said at a news conference at the Arab League in Cairo, referring to the start of the uprising in March 2011.
"A solution is still possible but is getting more complicated every day," he added. "We have a proposal and I believe this proposal is adopted by the international community."
Brahimi is the joint UN-Arab League envoy charged with trying to mediate an end to a conflict that has killed at least 44,000 people. "The situation in Syria is bad, very, very bad, and it is getting worse and the pace of deterioration is increasing," he said.
"People are talking about Syria being split into a number of small states ... this is not what will happen, what will happen is Somalisation: war lords," he said.
Somalia has been without effective central government since civil war broke out there in 1991.
Brahimi, referring to the Geneva plan, said: "There are sound foundations to build a peace process through which the Syrians themselves can end the war and fighting and to build the future."
The plan included a ceasefire, the formation of a government and steps towards elections, either for a new president, or a new parliament. But it left the fate of President Bashar Assad unclear although the Syrian opposition and foreign governments who back them insist he must go.
Meanwhile, Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdoğan hinted on Saturday there are "strong signals" the crisis in Syria is coming to an end, the Turkish Hurriyet daily reported.
Speaking at a party meeting on Saturday, Erdoğan said: "A government will soon be in charge in Syria that will satisfy the needs and desires of the Syrian people,” Hurriyet reported.
“We are receiving strong signals that the end is approaching in Syria. The brutal, bloody process is finally coming to and end. Soon there will be a government that will satisfy the needs and desires of the Syrian people,” Hurriyet quoted Erdoğan as saying.