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7/11/2012 7:48:49 AM
Russia will not deliver Yak-130 fighter planes to Syria. Moscow reportedly signed an order to deliver 40 fighter-trainer jets to Damascus at the end of last year
Russia will not deliver Yak-130 fighter planes to Syria. Moscow reportedly signed an order to deliver 40 fighter-trainer jets to Damascus at the end of last year
Russia will not deliver fighter jets to Syria as situation remains ‘unresolved’

Al Arabiya , 09 July 2012 - Russia will not deliver Yak-130 fighter planes to Syria while the situation there remains “unresolved,” the country’s service for military cooperation said on Monday, according to the RIA news agency.

“In the current situation talking about deliveries of airplanes to Syria is premature,” Vyacheslav Dzirkaln, deputy director of the service, told journalists at the Farnborough Airshow, RIA said.

Russia reportedly signed an order to deliver 40 fighter-trainer jets at the end of last year, despite controversy surrounding its arms sales to violence-torn Syria.
Putin urges for peace in Syria
Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Monday that Syria needed dialogue between the regime and opposition rather than foreign intervention to ensure a lasting peace.

“I am convinced that we must do everything possible to force the conflicting sides to find a peaceful political solution to all the disputed issues,” Putin told foreign dignitaries in a televised address.

“Of course, this is more difficult and delicate work than the crude use of outside force. But only this can ensure a long-term settlement and the future stable development of the situation in the region,” he said.

Putin also repeated his earlier warnings against powers ordering armed intervention against Moscow’s Soviet-era ally without prior approval from the U.N. Security Council on which Russia wields veto power.

“We will continue to firmly defend the principles of the UN Security Council charter. We will make sure that in cases when forced intervention is needed, the decision can only be taken by the UN Security Council,” said Putin.

“Supplanting such decisions with unilateral sanctions can only be counterproductive.”

Putin spoke only hours after prominent Syrian opposition leader and intellectual Michel Kilo held talks in Moscow with Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov.

The meeting came amid efforts by Russia to show its ability to speak not only to President Bashar al-Assad’s inner circle but also members of the opposition who have been scathing of Moscow’s stance in the near 17-month conflict.

Kilo told reporters after the meeting that he had initially supported dialogue with Assad but now felt that the situation had degenerated too far for meaningful talks.

“The regime -- alas -- is not replying to our demands and is saying that we are not representatives of the Syrian people,” news agencies quoted Kilo as saying.




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