The Syrian chargé d’affaires in London, Khaled al-Ayoubi, has resigned, the British Foreign Office said on Monday.
‘Mr. al-Ayoubi has told us that he is no longer willing to represent a regime that has committed such violent and oppressive acts against its own people, and is therefore unable to continue in his position,’ the Foreign Office said in a statement.
Al-Ayoubi was the most senior Syrian diplomat serving in London, it added.
‘Mr. al-Ayoubi has told us that he is no longer willing to represent a regime that has committed such violent and oppressive acts against its own people, and is therefore unable to continue in his position,’ the Foreign Office said in a statement.
Al-Ayoubi was the most senior Syrian diplomat serving in London, it added.
Britain expelled the previous Syrian charge d’affaires, Ghassan Dalla, and two other diplomats in May. Syria had earlier withdrawn its ambassador from London.
The Foreign Office said Ayoubi was not speaking to the media and asked for his privacy to be respected.
It said he joined the Syrian diplomatic service in 2001, and that his first posting was in Greece as consul from 2003 to 2008.
A Foreign Office spokesman would not confirm Ayoubi’s current whereabouts or say whether he was now seeking asylum in Britain.
Defections are becoming a growing problem for Assad’s regime, which has launched a bloody crackdown on a revolt in which more than 20,000 people have died since March 2011, according to activists.
Syria closed its embassy in Australia on Monday amid reports that some of its staff were seeking asylum.
Mayer Dabbagh, Syria’s honorary consul in Sydney, confirmed the closure but declined to say why the embassy had shut or what had become of its staff.
Also on Monday a diplomatic source said that another brigadier general had defected from Syria’s army to join the ranks of opposition fighters, pushing the total number of rebel generals based in Turkey to 28.
Senior Syrian officers have been crossing over into Turkey to link up with rebel forces on a near daily basis in recent months, often accompanied by rank-and-file troops, to join the ranks of the Free Syrian Army.
There have been a number of defections by diplomats too.
Sources said last week that Syria’s charge d’affairs in Cyprus, Lamia Hariri, and her husband Abdel Latif al-Dabbagh, the ambassador to the United Arab Emirates, had both defected.
Nawaf Fares, Syria’s ambassador to Iraq, left for Qatar earlier in July month after publicly renouncing his post.
The Foreign Office said Ayoubi was not speaking to the media and asked for his privacy to be respected.
It said he joined the Syrian diplomatic service in 2001, and that his first posting was in Greece as consul from 2003 to 2008.
A Foreign Office spokesman would not confirm Ayoubi’s current whereabouts or say whether he was now seeking asylum in Britain.
Defections are becoming a growing problem for Assad’s regime, which has launched a bloody crackdown on a revolt in which more than 20,000 people have died since March 2011, according to activists.
Syria closed its embassy in Australia on Monday amid reports that some of its staff were seeking asylum.
Mayer Dabbagh, Syria’s honorary consul in Sydney, confirmed the closure but declined to say why the embassy had shut or what had become of its staff.
Also on Monday a diplomatic source said that another brigadier general had defected from Syria’s army to join the ranks of opposition fighters, pushing the total number of rebel generals based in Turkey to 28.
Senior Syrian officers have been crossing over into Turkey to link up with rebel forces on a near daily basis in recent months, often accompanied by rank-and-file troops, to join the ranks of the Free Syrian Army.
There have been a number of defections by diplomats too.
Sources said last week that Syria’s charge d’affairs in Cyprus, Lamia Hariri, and her husband Abdel Latif al-Dabbagh, the ambassador to the United Arab Emirates, had both defected.
Nawaf Fares, Syria’s ambassador to Iraq, left for Qatar earlier in July month after publicly renouncing his post.
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