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Assad criticizes Western states over their support of terrorism

In a handout picture provided by the Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) shows Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (L), meeting with French right-wing Les Republicans party's MP and chairman of the Christian Democratic (PCD) party, Jean-Frederic Poisson in Damascus on October 28, 2015.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has once again slammed some regional and Western states for their support of terrorist groups operating in the country.

Assad made the remarks during a meeting with a French parliamentary delegation headed by Jean-Frederic Poisson, the leader of the Christian Democratic Party, in the Syrian capital Damascus on Wednesday.

“Several countries in the region and the West, including France, are continuing up until now to support terrorism by giving political cover to terrorist groups in Syria and the region,” the Syrian president said.

Assad also noted that two main causes of the suffering of the Syrian people are terrorism and the damage it had inflicted upon the country’s infrastructure and the “unjust” economic sanctions that had been imposed on Syria.

The French legislators, for their part, stressed the need to unify efforts in confronting terrorism in the Middle Eastern country, saying they would spare no efforts to change France’s current policies regarding Syria in a manner that would alleviate the suffering of the Syrian people.

They also highlighted the need to adopt a different approach regarding Syria and its years-long crisis as the current policies have failed to put an end to the war.

A handout picture released by the official Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) shows Syria's Grand Mufti Sheikh Ahmad Badreddin Hassoun (L), meeting with French right-wing Les Républicains party's MP and chairman of the Christian Democratic (PCD) party, Jean-Frederic Poisson (C-R), on October 27, 2015, in the capital Damascus.

Earlier on Tuesday, the French lawmakers had separate meetings with Syria's Parliament Speaker Jihad al-Laham and the country’s Grand Mufti Sheikh Ahmad Badreddin Hassoun.

Damascus says the militancy which has ravaged the country in the past few years is part of a conspiracy to bring about regime change in the Arab country.

Since the beginning of the foreign-backed crisis in Syria in March 2011, an assortment of militant groups, including the Daesh Takfiri terrorists and the US-backed Free Syrian Army, have been formed in the country with the ultimate goal of overthrowing the Syrian government. However, the militant groups have frequently turned on each other and engaged in infighting in a power struggle and over resources.

More than 250,000 people have been killed so far in Syria due to the violence perpetrated by the terrorists.


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