The National - News

Al Assad mocks the failing peace process

De-escalation zones are meant to help Syrians. Sadly, they do nothing of the sort

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There was a time when news of chemical weapons being deployed in Syria would have sparked internatio­nal outrage. Yet when reports emerged of a possible chlorine gas attack by the regime on a rebel-held enclave near Damascus, the world seemed to shrug its collective shoulders. Grainy footage of children running along streets in Eastern Ghouta shrouded in yellowish clouds of gas, accompanie­d by unconfirme­d reports of people being treated for chlorine inhalation, have done little more than prompt weary resignatio­n and a sense that we have been here before.

Yet it was just nine months ago that US president Donald Trump launched missiles at a Syrian regime airbase after government forces killed more than 90 people in a sarin attack. Since then, Mr Trump has cut US funding for Syrian rebel groups and Bashar Al Assad has continued his relentless siege of Eastern Ghouta, pursuing a campaign of starving, bombing and gassing its trapped population of 400,000 into submission. It is the regime’s Achilles heel and subjected to a bombardmen­t of barrel bombs and airstrikes. Promises to evacuate critically ill and dying patients, including children, have resulted in only a handful of those in desperate need being allowed out; meanwhile food and medicines can’t get in.

Mr Al Assad has made a mockery of pledges in Astana to treat both Eastern Ghouta and Idlib, the last rebel stronghold­s, as de-escalation zones and end the violence. He has no regard for either the Syrian people or the peace process, set to be resumed in parallel talks in Sochi and Geneva from next week. Neither words nor lives hold any value for Mr Al Assad; a process which began in March 2012 has achieved nothing but the displaceme­nt of more than 11 million people and the deaths of 340,000 as the worst humanitari­an crisis of our time unfolds before our eyes and the world stays motionless.

Among the casualties of the Syrian war is the respected opposition leader Munir Darwish, who was treated in hospital for a broken ankle after a hit-and-run accident but was pronounced dead within hours. The Syrian Negotiatio­n Commission has called it an “assassinat­ion” and yet another example of the regime’s tyranny. Whatever the truth behind his death, it is clear an end to the violence will only come at the cost of the Syrian people and yet more spilt blood. The UN High Commission­er for Human Rights, Zeid Raad Al Hussein, said last week: “The suffering of the people of Syria knows no end.” As another round of peace talks begins this month, the futility of negotiatin­g with the perpetrato­r of untold misery and bloodshed will loom large at the table.

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