The Borneo Post

UN restarts Syria peace talks but Assad regime absent

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GENEVA: The United Nations reopened its Syria peace talks yesterday but the Damascus government’s last minute announceme­nt that it may not come to Geneva delivered a blow to the already faltering negotiatio­ns.

The eighth round of talks were seen as a chance for the UN to revitalise its push to end the sixyear war, which has killed more than 340,000 people and left Syria in ruin.

UN envoy Staffan de Mistura has stressed the urgent need for progress towards a political solution and had been bolstered by the fractured opposition’s decision to form a unified negotiatio­n team for the first time.

But on the eve of the talks reopening, de Mistura told the Security Council that President Bashar al-Assad’s government had not yet committed to show up.

“The government did not yet confirm its participat­ion in Geneva but indicated that we would be hearing from them soon”, he said.

Regime negotiator­s did not travel to Geneva on Monday, all but assuring they will be absent for the opening of the talks.

The UN envoy recalled Assad’s pledge to Russian President Vladimir Putin last week that he was ‘ready for dialogue.’

“Naturally we know and indeed expect that the government will be on its way shortly, particular­ly in light of President Assad’s commitment to President Putin,” he added.

De Mistura had voiced hope the upcoming round will mark the first ‘ real negotiatio­n’ on a possible peace deal.

For that to happen rival sides will need to overcome the hurdle that has derailed past discussion­s: Assad’s fate.

De Mistura has told the opposition that its longstandi­ng demand for Assad’s ouster may no longer be tenable.

In September, he said the opposition it needed to be ‘realistic’ and realise “they didn’t win the war”, a statement supported by facts on the ground.

Backed by Russia’s decisive military support, Assad’s government has regained control of 55 per cent of the country, including major cities Damascus, Aleppo, Homs and Hama.

The rest is carved up between rebel factions, jihadists and Kurdish forces.

The decision last week by Syrian opposition groups to send a single delegation to Geneva raised hopes of a possible breakthrou­gh.

The new rebel negotiatin­g team includes members of the Saudi-backed High Negotiatio­ns Committee ( HNC), which insists on Assad’s ouster, as well as representa­tives of groups based in Moscow and Cairo that have a more moderate stance on the president.

Speaking to reporters shortly after landing in Geneva, opposition delegation chief Nasr al-Hariri said his camp was united on the need to put an ‘inclusive’ transition­al government in place ahead of elections UNsupervis­ed.

“That means that Bashar Assad will not be in power from the beginning of the transition”, he said, in a sign that the talks may remain deadlocked over the president’s future.

That could spell more trouble for the UN’s peace push, which has been overshadow­ed by deals spearheade­d by Moscow.

Russia, fellow regime ally Iran and rebel- backer Turkey have hosted negotiatio­ns in the Kazakh capital that led to the creation of four ‘de- escalation zones’ which produced a drop in violence, though deadly air strikes and battles continue in some areas.

Western powers are concerned that Russia is seeking to take a leading role in the peace process and will carve out a settlement that will largely favour Assad.

“The UN must be front and centre” in the Syrian peace process, said French Ambassador Francois Delattre.

Speaking in London on Monday Turkey’s Prime Minister said their tripartite talks should be seen as compliment­ary to the UN’s peace process.

“This process is not competing with the Geneva process,” Binali Yildirim said during an address at the Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies ( IISS).

He also reiterated Ankara’s determinat­ion to see Bashar alAssad leave power, something Moscow and Tehran remain staunchly opposed to. “Look how things evolved in Syria, who caused Syria to be in the situation that it is today – it all happened because of the regime, because of Assad,” he said.

He added in the long-term, “Assad cannot possibly survive in Syria, we have to accept this”.

De Mistura said he would be meeting with the ambassador­s from Security Council permanent representa­tives – Britain, France, China, Russia and the United States – in Geneva on Tuesday to discuss the upcoming talks.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Syrian men run through an alley in the rebel-controlled town of Mesraba, in the eastern Ghouta region on the outskirts of the capital Damascus.
— AFP photo Syrian men run through an alley in the rebel-controlled town of Mesraba, in the eastern Ghouta region on the outskirts of the capital Damascus.

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