The National - News

UN ENVOY WARNS AGAINST ATTEMPTS TO SABOTAGE GENEVA PEACE TALKS

▶ Syria government delegation will return to Geneva on Sunday with negotiatio­ns to wrap up on December 15

- MINA ALDROUBI

The UN special envoy on Syria plans to assess next week whether either side is trying to sabotage the peace talks in Geneva.

“If, God forbid, because it would be very bad news, we draw the conclusion that one of the two sides is actually ... de facto sabotaging the progress and the process of Geneva, that would have a very bad impact on any other political attempt to have processes elsewhere,” Staffan de Mistura said yesterday.

Speaking alongside Jan Egeland, the UN humanitari­an adviser for Syria, Mr de Mistura’s statement came after the Syrian government said its representa­tives would return to the negotiatio­ns on Sunday, five days late.

Mr de Mistura’s adviser, Michael Contet, confirmed that the United Nations had “received notificati­on from the government that its delegation will fly to Geneva on the 10th”.

The government delegation left Geneva on Saturday last week for a weekend break and did not return on Tuesday, the day Mr de Mistura had set for discussion­s to resume.

The eighth round of UN-brokered talks between the Syrian government and opposition, which began on Tuesday last week and are set to continue until December 15, have made little progress so far. This is the first time the opposition has sent a unified delegation.

Mr Egeland urged the regime to allow civilians to immediatel­y evacuate the besieged Damascus suburb of Eastern Ghouta.

“We are ready, we are waiting on military and government obstacles to be lifted, and this is not happening. We need help,” he said.

Mr Egeland said there were 494 cases in desperate need of relief. Twelve people had died in the past week while waiting for government permission to be moved to nearby hospitals.

“These are innocent civilians, children, they have caused no harm, they have the right to be evacuated and we have an obligation to evacuate them,” he said.

The opposition delegation has remained in Geneva and held several meetings with Mr de Mistura’s team this week. They were scheduled to meet the UN team again yesterday but, as opposition spokesman Yahya Aridi said, “it takes two to tango”.

On Wednesday, the opposition held talks with the US adviser to Syria, Stephanie Williams.

Nasr Al Hariri, head of the opposition delegation, stressed the importance of the US role in pushing the political process forward and the implementa­tion of internatio­nal resolution­s to reach a political solution to the Syrian war.

Mr Al Hariri called on Washington to exert pressure on the UN Security Council to fully implement resolution 2254, which provides for the cessation of hostilitie­s, the introducti­on of humanitari­an aid and the lifting of sieges on cities and towns.

This round of talks was expected to focus on the first basket of issues up for negotiatio­n, including what a post-war political transition will look like and the writing of a new constituti­on. The second basket, which includes post-war elections, is supposed to be discussed at the next round of talks.

Mr Al Hariri said the opposition’s talks with the UN team in the past two days had focused on the post-war political transition. He said agreement on a full political transition was essential to the stability and security of Syria.

The opposition and government delegation­s have not yet held direct talks. Last week, Mr de Mistura shuttled between the two negotiatin­g teams, who were installed in separate rooms off the same corridor. He said face-to-face contact was less important than the substance of talks, and that the atmosphere was “profession­al and serious” on both sides.

The UN-brokered talks have made little progress so far. This is the first time the opposition has sent a unified delegation

 ?? AFP ?? The site of a car bomb explosion in a predominan­tly pro-Assad neighbourh­ood in the central Syrian city of Homs on Tuesday
AFP The site of a car bomb explosion in a predominan­tly pro-Assad neighbourh­ood in the central Syrian city of Homs on Tuesday

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