President Bashar al-Assad said on Monday that foreign parties were funding "armed terrorist groups" to destabilize Syria and intent on blocking any political solution, the state news agency SANA reported.
It said the embattled president made the accusation in a meeting with a visiting top Russian MP, Alexei Pushkov, head of the international affairs committee of Russia's lower house of parliament.
Assad thanked Russia for its support of his country which he said was being "targeted by armed terrorist groups receiving funding and arms from foreign parties, aiming to destabilize Syria," SANA reported.
The same parties were determined "to block all efforts to reach a solution, especially with the reforms being brought in," he added.
Russia is a close ally of Damascus, which is under mounting Arab and international pressure to end its crackdown on pro-democracy protests that activists say has killed more than 6,000 people since March 2011.
The Russian MP, for his part, accused "some influential big states" of meddling into Syria's affairs, using humanitarian aid as a cover, SANA reported.
"Humanitarian intervention ends up non-humanitarian," he said, according to an Arabic translation provided by SANA, adding that the lower house "rejects such military interventions".
He accused major powers of "using international organizations to satisfy their interests," SANA added.
Moscow and Beijing earlier this month vetoed a U.N. Security Council resolution condemning the violence by Assad's regime, an action which earned Moscow a tirade of criticism from the West.
The visit by Pushkov, a member of the ruling United Russia party and former television commentator, comes after Russia's Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov held talks in Damascus earlier this month with Assad.
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