The Asian Age

Nations to hold Sochi congress for Syria in Jan.

Talks to solve crisis in war- hit nation

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Astana ( Kazakhstan), Dec. 22: Major powerbroke­rs agreed on Friday to hold a peace congress for Syria in Russia’s Black Sea resort of Sochi in late January in a bid to speed up a political settlement for the war- torn country.

Sochi will host a “congress of national dialogue on Syria” on January 29 and 30, said a joint statement released after two days of talks spearheade­d by Russia and Iran, both key backers of Syrian President Bashar al- Assad’s regime, and rebel- aligned Turkey.

The “Congress of National Dialogue” will see “the participat­ion of all segments of Syrian society,” said the statement released in the Kazakh capital Astana.

“To this end three guarantors will hold a special preparatio­n meeting in Sochi before the congress on 19- 20 January,” it added, referring to Russia, Turkey and Iran.

Russian President Vladimir Putin has been hoping to convert Moscow’s game- changing military interventi­on in Syria into a political settlement on his terms.

In November, he convened the leaders of Turkey and Iran in Sochi to discuss the plan for the peace conference.

While both Russian officials and Assad have spoken enthusiast­ically of the plan, rebel representa­tives have been wary and the UN has yet to firmly endorse it.

UN envoy Staffan de Mistura’s office acknowledg­ed Friday the plan to hold the congress in January without throwing its full support behind it. “The United Nations maintains its view that any political initiative by internatio­nal actors should be assessed by its ability to contribute to and support the mandated political process under the United Nations in Geneva,” Mr Mistura’s office said in a statement.

Mr Mistura held talks with Russian foreign minister Sergei Lavrov and defence minister Sergei Shoigu in Moscow on Friday.

Representa­tives of the opposition have expressed fears the Sochi congress could prove a distractio­n from the UN negotiatio­ns.

The Astana talks have run in parallel to the negotiatio­ns taking place in Geneva with the backing of the United Nations, but neither set of talks have borne much fruit.

Since the start of Syria’s war in 2011, several diplomatic attempts to halt the conflict have stumbled, mainly over Assad’s future.

 ??  ?? Staffan de Mistura
Staffan de Mistura

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