UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan told the Security Council on Thursday that Syria had not fully complied with the terms of his peace plan.
Annan also urged the 15-nation body to demand the withdrawal of troops and heavy weapons from towns, council diplomats said.
He told council members that Syria's fragile truce needed support and called for swift?deployment of a first batch?of unarmed observers to monitor implementation of his six-point peace plan, and that this should be followed by a second wave of observers later, diplomats told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
A UN-backed cease fire aimed at halting more than a year of bloodshed in Syria appeared to be holding early on Thursday but anti-government activists saw no sign that President Bashar al-Assad was pulling his forces out of restive cities.
Asked if Annan told the council the Syrian army still had troops and heavy weapons in towns, one envoy said: “Yes he did.''
Annan also told the Security Council that the “cease fire needs to be supported because it's fragile.
“He wants deployment of a mission of observers with a second wave later to monitor implementation of the six-point plan, with guarantees by Damascus,''the diplomat said.
Annan also urged the council “to demand withdrawal of heavy weapons and troops''.
Another diplomat confirmed his remarks.
The former UN secretary-general said earlier in a statement that “Syria is experiencing a rare moment of calm on the ground,'' adding that it “must be sustained''.
“The Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, will be asking the Security Council for approval of the deployment of a UN Observer Mission as soon as possible,'' Annan said in his statement.
“This will allow us to move quickly to launch a serious political dialogue that will address the concerns and aspirations of the Syrian people,''he said.
Annan's six-point plan calls for a cease fire by Syrian armed forces and rebels and dialogue between the government and opposition aimed at a “political transition'' for?the country.(Reuters/NAN)