The Niagara Falls Review

Peace talks rejected

Opposition groups say Russia failing to pressure Assad to end Syria’s civil war

- SARAH EL DEEB

BEIRUT — Syrian rebels and opposition groups on Tuesday rejected Russia’s proposed peace talks, accusing Moscow of failing to pressure its ally, Syrian President Bashar Assad, to end the conflict.

In a series of statements, 40 rebel groups as well as political opposition groups said the talks expected next month are an attempt to “circumvent” the UN-led process, which has made virtually no progress since it began in 2014.

The rebel groups said Moscow has asked them to give up their demand for Assad to step down.

“We reject this, and we affirm that Russia is an aggressor that has committed war crimes against Syrians,” the statement signed by 40 rebel groups said. “Russia has not contribute­d with a single move to alleviate the suffering of the Syrian people and it has not pressured the regime it claims it guarantees to move an inch toward any real path toward a resolution.”

The rebel groups, including Ahrar al-Sham, Army of Islam, and a number of Free Syrian Army groups, said they are committed to the UN-led Geneva process, and called on the internatio­nal community to end the bloodshed, now in its seventh year. Political opposition groups and governing bodies in rebel-held areas have also rejected Russia’s proposed talks.

The talks are scheduled for Jan. 29-30 in Sochi, Russia, and were announced after talks among Russia and Iran, which back the government, and Turkey, which supports the opposition.

Syria’s government said it would attend the talks. Assad told reporters recently that the Sochi talks have a clear agenda of discussing new elections and possibly amending the constituti­on.

The fate of Assad has been the main point of contention in all previous rounds of talks. The opposition has long called for a transition­al period in which Assad would have no role, something the government refuses to even consider.

The Sochi talks would open up a fourth track of talks between parties to the complex conflict. The UN’s own Geneva program has been supplement­ed by “technical” talks in Astana, Kazakhstan, brokered by Russia, Iran and Turkey.

Russia periodical­ly opens a third track through Cairo. Egypt has provided a base for Syrian reformists seen as acceptable to the Damascus government.

Turkey has said the Syrian Kurdish group known as the PYD, which governs around 25 per cent of Syria’s territory and wants autonomous rule, should not be invited. Russia said last week that Kurdish representa­tives would attend, but that it would not invite the PYD.

In a statement, the self-administra­tion of northeaste­rn Syria, where the PYD is dominant, said the authority and not individual parties should be represente­d at the Sochi talks. The PYD is the major political arm of the U.S.allied Kurdish militias that played a major role in defeating Islamic State. Ankara views the group as an extension of the Kurdish insurgency raging in its southeast.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said at least 20 people have been killed since Monday in airstrikes in southern Idlib, where the government is waging its first major ground offensive in years. The Observator­y and the Syrian Civil Defence said in the past 24 hours, government aircraft have dropped dozens of barrel bombs in the area, an indiscrimi­nate weapon that has killed thousands over the course of the civil war.

 ?? ABDULMONAM EASSA/GETTY IMAGES ?? Syrians cook bread inside a school turned into a shelter for people displaced by the war, in the rebel-controlled town of Hamouria, in the eastern Ghouta region on the outskirts of the capital Damascus.
ABDULMONAM EASSA/GETTY IMAGES Syrians cook bread inside a school turned into a shelter for people displaced by the war, in the rebel-controlled town of Hamouria, in the eastern Ghouta region on the outskirts of the capital Damascus.

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