Oman Daily Observer

Syrian activists demand talks on transition, ceasefire monitoring

Attack in Homs was a deliberate attempt to wreck the peace talks

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GENEVA: Syrian activists called on Sunday for the Assad government to engage in serious talks on political transition and for the United Nations to strengthen the fragile ceasefire as violence engulfed parts of the country.

UN mediator Staffan de Mistura said a militant attack in Homs on Saturday was a deliberate attempt to wreck the Geneva peace talks, while the warring sides traded blame and appeared no closer to actual negotiatio­ns.

“Our hopes are not high given the incidents on the ground and the continuous violations by the regime forces and its backers of the ceasefire,” Mutasem Alysoufi of ‘The Day after Syria’ campaign that supports democratic transition, said in Geneva. Warplanes bombed rebelheld areas around several Syrian cities on Sunday including in the Al Waer district of Homs, and in towns around Damascus, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor said.

One person was killed in the Damascus suburb of Douma and three in Al Waer, the Observator­y said, while shells and rockets were launched at insurgent districts in Deraa and Idlib provinces. Rebels fired several shells at a suburb of government-held Aleppo.

Under Security Council resolution 2254, de Mistura is meant to develop a plan to monitor the ceasefire and sanction those who violate it, Alysoufi said. “So this is a duty of the UN.”

On the government delegation led by Syrian Ambassador Bashar Ja’afari, Alysoufi said: “We believe that they are not serious to engage here in serious political discussion, rather they are gaining more time and continuing their military strategy on the ground.”

De Mistura handed a working paper on procedural issues to delegation­s on Friday but there appears little prospect of moving to the key political issues that he had hoped to begin addressing.

He is set to hold talks on Sunday with two opposition groups that curry favour with Russia, President Bashar al Assad’s main backer.

The UN envoy indicated to the High Negotiatio­ns Committee, which is leading the opposition delegation, that he would like to unify the disparate groups to facilitate face-toface talks with the government to end the nearly six-year-old conflict.

 ?? — AFP ?? A Syrian man inspects the damage following reported government airstrike on the rebel-held town of Douma, on the eastern outskirts of the capital Damascus.
— AFP A Syrian man inspects the damage following reported government airstrike on the rebel-held town of Douma, on the eastern outskirts of the capital Damascus.

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