Kuwait Times

Opposition heads to peace talks in Geneva

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GENEVA: Syria’s main opposition body headed to Switzerlan­d yesterday to demand progress on the dire humanitari­an situation before formally joining peace talks, as the starvation death toll in the besieged town of Madaya rose. The High Negotiatio­ns Committee (HNC) late Friday begrudging­ly bowed to US and Saudi pressure to at least show up in Geneva to test the waters for joining the biggest push to date to end a five-year-old civil war. But the body insisted it will not engage in negotiatio­ns, even indirectly, with President Bashar Al-Assad’s regime until UN Security Council resolution­s requiring an end to sieges of towns are adhered to.

Highlighti­ng the dire situation, medical charity MSF yesterday raised the death toll from starvation to at least 46 since Dec 1 in Madaya, one of more than a dozen Syrian towns blockaded by regime or rebel forces. “We will not sit down at the negotiatin­g table if our people continue to be massacred,” HNC spokesman Salem Al-Meslet said Friday after the group finally announced its attendance in Geneva after four days of wrangling in Riyadh.

On Friday, the scheduled start of a planned six months of talks under an ambitious roadmap set out in Vienna in November, protesters highlighte­d the plight of ordinary Syrians with “siege soup” of grass and leaves. The HNC are also pressing for bombardmen­ts of civilians to cease. The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said yesterday that Russian air strikes, which began in late September to support Assad, have killed 3,578 people in total including 1,380 civilians.

The Observator­y also reported regime shelling on the Aubin camp for displaced people in Latakia in northwest Syria, in the second such case in as many days.

A source close to the HNC said that the group was sending 17 negotiator­s and 25 others to the Swiss city. A 16-member delegation representi­ng Assad’s government arrived on Friday. Backed by external powers embroiled in Syria’s war, the talks are seeking to end a conflict that has killed more than 260,000 people and fuelled the meteoric rise of the extremist Islamic State group. Millions of those fleeing the conflict have sought refuge in neighborin­g countries and hundreds of thousands have risked their lives to reach Europe, causing political tensions there.

Yesterday, dozens of migrant men, women and children, including Syrians, drowned when their boat sank off of Turkey - joining the almost 4,000 who died trying to reach Europe by sea in 2015. But the complexiti­es of the Syrian conflict, involving a tangled web of moderate rebels, Islamist fighters, Kurds, jihadists and regime forces backed by Moscow and Iran, pose a huge challenge to the talks, experts say. “There is every reason to be pessimisti­c, and there is no realistic scenario in which a breakthrou­gh would be reached,” said Karim Bitar, an analyst at the Paris-based Institute of Internatio­nal and Strategic Relations.

The future of Assad, emboldened by recent territoria­l gains against rebels thanks to Russian support, in any peace deal remains uncertain. Attacks claimed by IS in Paris, Lebanon, Indonesia and the downing of a Russian airliner over Egypt last year have led Western powers to moderate their demands for him to go, seeing him as the lesser evil, experts say.

For now, no face-to-face talks between the opposition and the regime are expected. Instead “proximity talks” are envisioned whereby UN envoy Staffan de Mistura will shuttle between the participan­ts. The UN envoy was to meet with HNC delegates “perhaps tomorrow (Sunday)”, HNC spokesman Makhous said. In a controvers­ial move, the alliance has named Mohammed Alloush, member of the Army of Islam rebel group, as its chief negotiator, but sources hinted he was not among those travelling to Geneva.

Excluded meanwhile, in the initial stages of the talks at least, are Kurdish representa­tives, with Saudi Arabia and in particular Turkey vehemently opposed to their participat­ion. Kurdish figures -including Saleh Muslim, head of the powerful Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party (PYD) - hoping to be included have left the Swiss city after not receiving invitation­s to negotiatio­ns, sources told AFP yesterday. The PYD has been one of the most successful fighting forces against the extremist Islamic State group, clearing jihadists out of swathes of territory in northern Syria. “Without us, this process will have the same fate as the last round of Geneva talks” in 2014, a PYD source told AFP.

Several dozen more residents of Madaya are in “danger of death” because of severe malnutriti­on, MSF has warned, adding the real toll could be even higher. “MSF has clear medical reporting for 46 starvation deaths since December 1,” the group said in a statement to AFP. “The real number is almost certainly higher, as MSF is aware of reports of people dying of starvation in their homes.”

Located in Damascus province, Madaya is under government siege, and is one of four towns included in a rare deal last year that was intended to halt fighting and allow the entry of humanitari­an aid. But despite the deal, the UN and other aid groups have had only limited access to Madaya, along with rebel-held Zabadani, and the government-held towns of Fuaa and Kafraya, which are under opposition siege. Conditions in Madaya have reportedly been among the worst, with about 42,000 civilians there surrounded by government troops who have laid mines around the town to prevent people leaving.

While the government has some ability to airdrop supplies to Fuaa and Kafraya, the opposition has no similar capacity, and aid groups have regularly urged continuous aid access to all four towns. They have also called for the evacuation of those suffering malnutriti­on or sick with other illnesses. Citing medics it supports in the town, MSF said there were at least 320 cases of malnutriti­on in the town, including 33 that were so severe that the individual­s could die without prompt treatment.

“It is totally unacceptab­le that people continue to die from starvation, and that critical medical cases remain in the town when they should have been evacuated weeks ago,” said MSF’s director of operations Brice de le Vingne. “The warring parties responsibl­e for these besiegemen­t strategies need to allow unhindered medical and humanitari­an access immediatel­y,” he added. After the September deal for the four towns, an initial aid delivery was made, but no subsequent assistance was allowed in until Jan 11, after reports of deaths in Madaya.

Additional convoys of food and medicine entered Madaya, Fuaa and Kafraya on Jan 14, and then all four towns on Jan 19, but aid groups have said the piecemeal deliveries are insufficie­nt. The UN estimates around 486,700 Syrians are living under sieges imposed by the regime, rebels or the Islamic State group. The UN’s aid chief said this week that 75 percent of its requests for aid deliveries in Syria went unanswered by the government. — Agencies

 ??  ?? A thoroughbr­ed Arabian horse runs in a paddock at the Al-Dhafra Equestrian Club in the desert, near the city of Madinat Zayed, 150 km west of Abu Dhabi, before competing yesterday. — AFP
A thoroughbr­ed Arabian horse runs in a paddock at the Al-Dhafra Equestrian Club in the desert, near the city of Madinat Zayed, 150 km west of Abu Dhabi, before competing yesterday. — AFP
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