Oman Daily Observer

Syria talks restart as US charges denied

CRUCIAL: Five previous rounds of negotiatio­ns have failed to yield a solution

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GENEVA: A new round of Syria peace talks opened on Tuesday in Geneva as the Damascus regime fiercely denied it used a prison crematoriu­m to hide evidence of thousands of murdered detainees.

Five previous rounds of UNbacked negotiatio­ns have failed to yield a political solution to the raging six-year conflict.

UN envoy Staffan de Mistura met with Syrian government negotiator Bashar al Jaafari at the UN headquarte­rs on Tuesday morning, followed by the opposition High Negotiatio­ns Committee (HNC) in the afternoon.

But hopes for a breakthrou­gh remain dim, with tensions rising even further over US claims of new regime atrocities at the notorious Saydnaya prison near Damascus.

The US State Department on Monday accused Bashar al Assad’s government of using a crematoriu­m to cover up the deaths of thousands of prisoners at Saydnaya — a claim Damascus swiftly denied.

“These allegation­s are totally unfounded, they are nothing but the product of the imaginatio­n of this administra­tion and its agents,” state news agency SANA quoted the foreign ministry as saying.

HNC spokesman Salem al Muslet, speaking to AFP ahead of his delegation’s first talks with de Mistura, said the fresh accusation­s demanded a response.

“The Americans know what’s going on in Syria now,” Muslet said.

“To save the lives of Syrian people, it needs some action from the (United) States, from our friends, and I hope they will do it very soon.”

Syria’s government and opposition figures are in Geneva for the first time since the last round of talks closed in late March.

The new negotiatio­ns are the latest effort to reach a political solution to a war that has killed more than 320,000 people and displaced millions more.

They are expected to focus on four separate “baskets”: governance, a new constituti­on, elections and combating “terrorism” in the war-ravaged country.

With Assad’s negotiator­s and the HNC expected to be in the Swiss city until the weekend, de Mistura said he wanted to drill down on several issues in hopes of generating solid proposals.

But one issue — Assad’s fate — remains a daunting roadblock.

The HNC has insisted the president’s ouster must be part of any political transition, a demand unacceptab­le to the Syrian regime.

The Geneva talks have also been overshadow­ed by a string of rebel evacuation­s from the Syrian capital and rival negotiatio­ns in the Kazakh capital, Astana.

Sponsored by rebel supporter Turkey and regime backers Russia and Iran, that track produced a May 4 deal to create four “de-escalation” zones across some of Syria’s bloodiest battlegrou­nds.

De Mistura has dismissed suggestion­s that the Astana negotiatio­ns were competing with the Geneva track, saying they were “working in tandem.”

 ?? — Reuters ?? Syria’s main opposition High Negotiatio­ns Committee leader Nasr al Hariri attends a new round of Syria peace talks with UN Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for Syria Staffan de Mistura in Geneva.
— Reuters Syria’s main opposition High Negotiatio­ns Committee leader Nasr al Hariri attends a new round of Syria peace talks with UN Special Envoy of the Secretary-General for Syria Staffan de Mistura in Geneva.
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