China Daily

New talks seen as ‘last hope’ for solution

- By REN QI renqi@chinadaily.com.cn

A new round of Syrian peace talks pushed by the UN started on Thursday, as violence continues to rage in a seven-year-old war that has claimed more than 340,000 lives.

The two-day meeting in Vienna, Austria, comes after eight previous rounds in Geneva, the last one in December, that failed to get the different parties even to talk to each other.

Representa­tives from the Syrian government have refused to meet the opposition directly until they drop demands that he leave office.

Hong Zhenxi, a researcher and columnist, said the advantages won by the Syrian government will definitely be reflected on the negotiatio­n table.

Hong said what the opposition rebels have insisted on, which is the step-down of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, is unlikely to happen in the current conditions.

The internatio­nal community highly valued the talk between the Syrian government and the rebels, emphasizin­g the critical importance of the discussion­s.

The UN special envoy, Staffan de Mistura, said on Wednesday that the negotiatio­ns in Vienna, involving “full delegation­s” of the opposition and the government, come at a “very, very critical moment”, according to AFP.

Nasr al-Hariri from the main opposition group, the Syrian Negotiatio­ns Commission, said that the next two days would be “a real test for all the sides”.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said in Paris that the talks are the “last hope” for reaching a political solution, Reuters reported.

Le Drian also highlighte­d a “considerab­le worsening of the humanitari­an situation” in Afrin, as well as in Idlib and in Eastern Ghouta.

Meanwhile, US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson spoke by phone with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, discussing issues and concerns about Syria, said the US State Department in a statement.

“On Syria, the two discussed Russia’s role in ensuring the Assad regime plays a constructi­ve role in the UN-led Geneva process,” according to the statement.

Gu Zhenglong, a researcher from the Center for Internatio­nal Cultural Developmen­t of Xinhua News Agency, said the Syrian crisis has become more complicate­d than ever, as it was influenced by different external forces, such as Russia, Iran, the US and Saudi Arab.

This has made it difficult for the rebuilding of Syria in its postwar era, as those supporting the Assad government and the opposition will continue to compete for their interests in the region, he said.

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