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Syria ex-PM says regime collapsing
There are worrying signs that the conflict in Syria is breaking up along sectarian lines. (AAP)
The Organisation of Islamic Cooperation is mulling suspending Syria, even as a top defector says the Assad regime is on the verge of collapse.
Syria's former prime minister, the highest profile government figure to defect, says the regime is collapsing as Muslim countries mull suspending Syria from the OIC.
"The Syrian regime only controls 30 per cent of Syria's territory. It has collapsed militarily, economically and morally," Riad Hijab told a news conference in the Jordanian capital Amman on Tuesday.
Hijab fled to Jordan last week, the latest in a string of defections from President Bashar al-Assad's government, which is becoming increasingly embattled as the 17-month conflict shows no signs of abating.
The United States, which has imposed a raft of tough sanctions to try to force Assad's departure, reacted by lifting an asset freeze imposed on Hijab.
"The United States encourages other officials within the Syrian government, in both the political and military ranks, to take similarly courageous steps to reject the Assad regime and stand with the Syrian people," US Treasury official David Cohen said.
Hijab's replacement as premier, Wael al-Halqi, insisted the sanctions imposed by Arab and Western governments "have only affected innocent Syrians".
After Damascus talks with UN humanitarian chief Valerie Amos on what she called the "deteriorating humanitarian situation", the new prime minister voiced confidence in "Syria's capacity to resist, to overcome the crisis and to bring about reconciliation, security and stability".
In an apparent snub to Amos, he said the fate of more than a million people displaced by the conflict was "not a UN issue".
Western policymakers hope that a wave of defections will bring about the collapse of the autocratic government, ending a conflict that seems to be in stalemate with the international community deeply divided over what action to take.
An emergency summit of the 57-member Organisation of Islamic Cooperation (OIC) began late on Tuesday in the holy city of Mecca with a proposal to suspend Syria, a move strongly opposed by Iran.
A draft final statement obtained by AFP said the summit "approves the suspension of Syria's membership", a measure recommended by a preparatory ministerial meeting held on Monday in the western Saudi city of Jeddah.
The move would further isolate Assad's regime, after Syria was suspended from the Arab League last year over its brutal crackdown on an Arab Spring-inspired revolt launched in March 2011.
The OIC represents 1.5 billion Muslims worldwide, and its suspension of Syria would heap pressure on Assad, who has characterised the uprising as a plot by Western and rival powers to overthrow his Iran-allied government.
Iranian President Mahmoud Ahmadinejad, whose country has openly criticised the push to suspend Syria, is attending the extraordinary OIC meeting and was expected to strongly oppose the move against Damascus.
The draft statement says Syria should be suspended over "the obstinacy of the Syrian authorities in following the military option" to solve the crisis and the failure of a UN-Arab League peace plan brokered by Kofi Annan.
Although a number of senior figures have abandoned the regime, analysts say that until military units begin to defect en masse, the Assad family and the top echelon of the military and security services will remain intact.
"Syria is full of officials and military leaders who are awaiting the right moment to join the revolt," Hijab said, urging the fractured opposition to unite.
His comments came as fresh fighting erupted for control of key districts of the northern city of Aleppo while Syrian forces bombarded areas around Damascus and launched a new security operation in the capital, a human rights watchdog said.
Aleppo - where communications have been cut for at least three days - is a metropolis of about 2.7 million people and seen as pivotal to the outcome of the conflict, with some referring to it as Syria's Benghazi, the Libyan city at the heart of the revolt that toppled Muammar Gaddafi's regime.
In Damascus, security forces raided several districts after a major security operation on Monday, while several suburbs outside the capital were shelled, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
A total of 89 people were killed nationwide on Tuesday, 53 of them civilians, it said.
With Assad under mounting pressure, a top presidential aide was dispatched on Tuesday to China, which has said it wants an immediate ceasefire and political dialogue to halt the bloodshed.
China and Russia are at odds with the West over how to end the fighting, after both traditional Syria allies vetoed UN Security Council resolutions.
Beijing said it had backed the peace plan of outgoing peace envoy Kofi Annan, who announced his resignation earlier this month in the face of the continued violence and the deadlock among world powers.
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