Country: Democratic India
Delegate: Rishi Birudu, Meridian school
Topic: situation in Syria
The Syrian Arab Republic is currently in a state of civil war with its multi-religious and multi-ethnic society. For a year and a half since the “Arab Spring”, the rebel movement has protested the restrictions on their rights and the lack of government transparency, while the oppressive Syrian government, led by Bashar al-Assad, is fraught with corruption and attempts to stifle the rebels. Syria receives support from surrounding countries in the Middle East and Asia in the form of weapons and propaganda. A major problem is that the Syrian conflict has forced millions of Syrians to flee to country, the majority being women and children. Key army units remain loyal to the regime as the prolonged civil war ensues, with disastrous consequences expected to hit Syria’s warring. According the United Nations’ proceedings in July, the conflict has claimed an estimated 17,000 of civilians’ lives, displaced more than 1.2 million Syrians, and has caused more than 1 million people to flee to neighboring Middle Eastern nations such as Iraq, Jordan, and Turkey to seek refuge. International disapproval of the Syrian massacre was highlighted in the Arab League’s observation of the Syrian government in 2011. This marked the pinnacle of Syria isolating itself from most of its former neighboring allies. In a letter circulated by the Security Council in April of 2013, the UN ambassador of Jordan, Prince Zeid Ra’adZeid Al Hussein, addressed the issue of Syrian refugees fleeing to Jordan. The influx of Syrians into surrounding areas has greatly compromised the international peace and security of Jordan among other nations, as stated in the letter.
Morocco’s current policy focuses on indirectly assisting the rebel movement by providing supplies and asylum to those groups affected by the civil war. The delegation considers it imperative that a cease-fire be put