News Daily Spot: British Government and Parliament disagree on bombings in Syria

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British Government and Parliament disagree on bombings in Syria

In Iraq and British air forces carried out bombings, and London wants to expand to Syria, but before submitting the plan to want to secure a majority vote. In 2013 Cameron was defeated in the House of Commons when he presented an initiative against Syrian President Bashar al Assad.

British Prime Minister David Cameron, does not have enough parliamentary support for his military plans in Syria, which for now has frozen the idea of ​​asking for a mandate to conduct air strikes against Islamic State (EI) reported today Times and Guardian newspapers.

However, Downing Street sources denied the information on BBC radio and described as "absolute nonsense", DPA reported.



Overnight, a conservative committee headed by Cameron Conservative Party had reported that before a vote the prime minister must clearly show how the international community intends to defeat the terrorists and end the bloody civil war in Syria.

Lawmakers recommended seeking a UN resolution instead of causing "major damage" to the image of UK attacks without clear legal basis.

In Iraq and British air forces carried out bombings, and London wants to expand to Syria, but before submitting the plan to want to secure a majority vote. In 2013 Cameron was defeated in the House of Commons when he presented an initiative against Syrian President Bashar al Assad.

The media speculated that between 20 and 30 conservative lawmakers who oppose the initiative, and the government only counts in the House with a majority of 17 mandates.

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