The Phnom Penh Post

Rivals weigh Syria charter plan

- Maya Gebeily

RIVAL Syrian delegation­s yesterday weighed a United Nations proposal on developing a new constituti­on for the war-ravaged country, as a new round of peace talks entered a second day.

The sixth round of UNbacked negotiatio­ns in Geneva is the latest drive to bring a political solution to the conflict which has claimed more than 320,000 lives since 2011.

The talks opened with tensions high over a US charge that Syrian President Bashar alAssad’s government was using a prison crematoriu­m to hide evidence of thousands of murdered detainees.

Syria’s government delegation, led by Bashar al-Jaafari, returned to UN headquarte­rs yesterday afternoon for a meeting with talks mediator Staffan de Mistura.

They were expected to discuss his proposal to create a “consultati­ve” committee of civil society activists and technocrat­s tasked with setting a roadmap to a new constituti­on.

The team would begin work immediatel­y on “specific options for constituti­onal drafting” in order to “prevent a constituti­onal or legal vacuum at any point during the political transition process being negotiated”, according to a copy of the document seen by AFP.

Syrian government officials did not respond to requests for comment, but a source close to the delegation confirmed they had received the document.

The opposition High Negotiatio­ns Committee (HNC) has said it has “reservatio­ns” about the draft, which it was expected to discuss with de Mistura yesterday.

An opposition source said that the HNC had submitted a list of questions on the document to the UN, including on what “prerogativ­es” the new committee would have.

“This paper was a surprise – it was not expected in the first place,” the HNC’s Munzer Makhos said. “We don’t know what the aim is or how it will be implemente­d. We don’t want there to be more committees outside of our control.”

The UN-backed talks are expected to focus on four separate “baskets”: governance, a new constituti­on, elections and combating “terrorism” in the war-ravaged country. While the HNC has insisted on Assad’s ouster as part of any political transition, the government sees this demand as a nonstarter.

The back-to-back meetings on Tuesday were brief, in line with de Mistura’s pledge to keep the talks “rather business-like, rather short”.

Hopes for a breakthrou­gh remain dim, particular­ly after US claims of new regime atrocities at the notorious Saydnaya prison near Damascus.

Satellite images released by the US State Department appeared to support earlier claims by rights groups that Saydnaya is an execution centre, a claim Damascus rejected.

Relatives of detained Syrians – some of them imprisoned in Saydanaya – gathered outside the UN in Geneva yesterday, carrying portraits of their missing loved ones and tearfully writing their names on long strips of paper.

The HNC has said Washington’s accusation­s about Saydnaya demand a response from the United States and other friendly nations, but also called on Russia to take action.

“For us, we need to see a different role for Russia – not only helping Assad commit crimes. We need to see Russia help Syrians decide their fate and their destiny,” said HNC spokesman Salem al-Meslet.

The UN meanwhile confirmed that de Misura met earlier yesterday with Russia’s Deputy Foreign Minister Gennady Gatilov. Jaafari met Gatilov in Geneva on Tuesday.

Longtime regime ally Moscow has become a key player in Syria’s crisis, launching an air war in support of Assad in 2015 and brokering several agreements aimed at ending the war.

The latest effort is a tripartite agreement between Russia, fellow Assad ally Iran, and rebel backer Turkey to create four “deescalati­on” zones across some of Syria’s bloodiest battlegrou­nds.

It was signed on May 4 in the Kazakh capital Astana as part of parallel negotiatio­ns.

De Mistura has dismissed suggestion­s that the Astana talks are competing with the Geneva track, saying they were “working in tandem”.

 ?? LOUAI BESHARA/AFP ?? Residents of al-Qaboun, in Damascus, wait in an area designated by the Syrian government after the suburb was retaken by regime forces, on Tuesday.
LOUAI BESHARA/AFP Residents of al-Qaboun, in Damascus, wait in an area designated by the Syrian government after the suburb was retaken by regime forces, on Tuesday.

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