The Miracle

No breakthrou­gh in Turkey-Iran-

Russia talks on Syria constituti­on

- Source: Al-Jazeera

A tripartite meeting between Russia, Turkey and Iran to discuss the formation of an allinclusi­ve committee tasked with drafting a new Syrian constituti­on had ended without a major breakthrou­gh, and a plan to reconvene in a few weeks time. The officials of the three nations acting as guarantors of a ceasefire in the war-torn country met on Tuesday in the Swiss city of Geneva under the auspices of the United Nations. In a brief statement issued after the meeting, UN Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said “some common ground was beginning to emerge” around the formation of the committee. “Constructi­ve exchanges and substantiv­e discussion­s took place on issues relevant to the establishm­ent and functionin­g of a constituti­onal committee.” For its part, the Syrian opposition said it needs to receive guarantees about the scope and form of the constituti­onal body before endorsing its mandate. “There are many aspects that are not yet clear about the prospected constituti­onal committee,” Yahya al-Aridi, spokespers­on for the Syrian Negotiatio­n Commission (SNC) told Al Jazeera from the Turkish city of Istanbul. “We are asking many questions about the formation, functions, terms of reference of this committee. Who will be accredited to participat­e? Is it going to be part of the transition­al process? That is why there is a delay in the presentati­on of the list of names that should be part of it on behalf of the opposition.” In the past few days, de Mistura said the Syrian government had already presented a list of 50 names to be part of the committee that would be tasked with drafting Syria’s new constituti­on. But al-Aridi said there is an attempt on behalf of groups who are not recognised by the Syrian opposition to become part of the body. “There are small groups that are not considered by the people as opposition who are rushing to present their credential­s,” said al-Aridi, without giving any more informatio­n. “The only opposition group that can participat­e seriously in a constituti­onal committee is the SNC as per the Security Council Resolution 2254.” The Syrian opposition is afraid that the government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assadmay hijack the work of the constituti­onal committee with the end result that, like for the 2012 Constituti­on, it would leave too much power in the hands of the government. A sticking point in the forthcomin­g constituti­onal debate will be the authority of the Syrian president. Al-Aridi said the opposition, which was not part of today’s tripartite meeting in Geneva, was waiting to know which bylaws would regulate the work of the committee and its legitimacy. “Who is to legitimise the constituti­on they will come up with?” alAridi said. Aridi added that the creation of the committee should not belittle the other issues at stake in the Syrian political process under Security Council Resolution 2254. “If the whole Syrian issue is condensed into the creation of the committee, this is ridiculous. It has to be part of the implementa­tion of Security Council resolution 2254 and not divert the attention from the discussion of the other issues.” The meeting in Geneva followed up on the agreement signed at the Syrian National Dialogue Congress in the Russian city of Sochi in January, whose final statement called for the creation of a constituti­onal commission formed by government, opposition and Syrian civil society. The creation of the constituti­onal committee would the first step for a political solution of the conflict as mandated by the Security Council Resolution 2254. De Mistura had earlier declared that “besides government and opposition, it will be important that independen­ts, civil society, experts, and women - at least 30 percent of women - all find their place into this constituti­onal committee.” The UNled peace process based in Geneva has laid out the so-called four “baskets of reform” for a political settlement of the crisis. They include the drafting of a new constituti­on, parliament­ary elections, the creation of a non-sectarian transition­al government and the fight against terrorism. But the talks have made little progress so far as government and opposition have failed to find an agreement over the fate of al-Assad. Since the beginning of the Syrian uprising, more than 465,000 Syrians have been killed and over 12 million - half the country’s population - have been displaced.

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