U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon urged the world community on Tuesday to take action on the situation in Syria.
While Ban stopped short of calling for military intervention, he delivered some of his strongest statements yet condemning the violence he says Syrian President Bashar Assad is perpetrating against his people. Ban said it is time for U.N. member nations to unite and take "coherent measures."
Ban, who was in New Zealand attending a meeting of Pacific leaders, told reporters that the aspirations of the Syrian people should be heeded and respected.
He said Assad needs to take "immediate and bold and decisive measures before it's too late." He later amended that to say "It's already too late, in fact. It's already too late. If it takes more and more days, then more people will be killed."
The U.N. puts the death toll in Syria at 2,200 since an uprising began there five months ago.
Ban has tried for months to resolve the situation using diplomatic means. A U.N. humanitarian assessment team visited Syria two weeks ago. Activists said that soon after the team left the city of Homs, Syrian security forces killed at least seven people there.
It has proved nearly impossible to verify events on the ground because Syria has banned international media and severely restricted local coverage.
After the assessment team left, the U.N.'s top human rights body voted overwhelmingly to demand that Syria end its crackdown and cooperate with an international probe into possible crimes against humanity.
Ban said he last spoke to Assad on Aug. 17 to express alarm about reports of security forces using excessive force against civilians.
In an email, Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky said he was not aware of Ban having any immediate plans to speak again with Assad. Nesirky added that "the secretary-general has consistently said he would do his utmost to reach out to try to stop the violence."
Ban did not say whether he personally favored military action at this point.
"It's not for the secretary-general to talk about any specific measures, including this military measure," he said. "It's the member states who should be able to give a mandate on any specific measures."
He expressed frustration that U.N. members have not been able to reach agreement on what needs to be done about the Syrian situation.
One group that is touting a plan for Assad to leave is the Arab League.
Under the plan, Assad would immediately cease all military operations, release all political prisoners, begin a dialogue and announce his intention to form a national unity government and hold pluralistic presidential elections by the end of his term in 2014.
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