Domestic • – Syria's Permanent Representative to the UN,
Dr. Bashar Jaafari, emphasized that the Syrian government is ready to do everything in its power to make the mission of the UN envoy a success, indicating that Syria has offered all necessary facilitations for Annan's plan and the UN observer mission. He further said that killing innocent civilians in Al-Qubeir took place five hours before any clashes happened, adding that the images broadcast by
al Jazeera and
al Arabia are not those of the massacre victims. The Syrian government blamed "terrorists" for the massacre.
International • – Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon condemned the reported massacre as "shocking and sickening", and an "unspeakable barbarity". • – Prime Minister
Julia Gillard condemned the massacre and said, "We will continue to work with the rest of the world to put pressure on Syria to cease the violence." • – Government spokesman
Steffen Seibert said that Germany was "horrified" by the latest Syrian massacre and urged Russia to throw its support behind a tougher condemnation of Assad's government by the
United Nations Security Council. • – Italy warned that Assad's policies risk creating "
genocide" unless swift action to stop him is realized. • – Lebanon's
Future bloc leader MP
Fouad Siniora condemned the massacre and called on Russia to reconsider its stance on the Syrian crisis. • – Foreign Minister
Tonio Borg condemning the attacks, said that the Syrian government is not willing to stop the violence. • – Liu Weimin, the
foreign ministry spokesman said Beijing "strongly condemns the deaths of innocent civilians and calls for the perpetrators to be punished". • –
Alexei Pushkov, the head of the foreign-affairs committee in the
State Duma, the
lower house of
Russian parliament, said in a
telephone interview to
Bloomberg that "There’s no proof of either the involvement of pro-government or opposition forces". • – Abdullatif Salam, Deputy Chief of the Saudi Mission at the United Nations, addressing the UN General Assembly, asked the world community to shoulder its responsibilities to end bloodshed in Syria. • – Prime Minister
Recep Tayyip Erdoğan emphasized that Turkey will never remain silent in the face of mass killings in Syria, recalling the mass killings in a farmland in
Hama province and that Assad will sooner or later leave the country and he is now preparing his end. He also added that "you already know which countries are helping him." • – Prime Minister
David Cameron called the killings "brutal and sickening" and stated that
his government would continue to seek international action against Syria. • – Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton described the violence as "unconscionable". == See also ==