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UN battles to save Syria peace talks as opposition walks out over violations

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GENEVA — The UN was struggling Monday to keep troubled Syria peace negotiatio­ns on track, as the opposition suspended its “formal participat­ion” in the talks in protest at escalating violence on the ground.

Russian President Vladimir Putin and his US counterpar­t Barack Obama, meanwhile, agreed to help strengthen a fragile ceasefire in Syria, seen as essential to paving the way towards a lasting deal to end the bloodshed.

With fighting surging around Syria’s second city Aleppo and negotiatio­ns in Geneva stalled over the fate of President Bashar al-Assad, the opposition said they had had enough.

“Since these talks began in Geneva, the Assad regime has worsened the situation on the ground,” Salem al-Meslet of the main opposition High Negotiatio­ns Committee (HNC) said in a statement.

The group said the talks must be placed on “brief hold in order to end the Assad regime’s truce violations”, accusing the regime of more than 2,000 violations of the ceasefire since it began on Feb. 27.

“The HNC remains fully committed to the political process and establishi­ng peace through diplomacy,” Mr. Meslet said. “We remain in Geneva ready to engage in serious talks.”

HNC coordinato­r Riad Hijab said earlier it was “unacceptab­le” for the negotiatio­ns to continue while Mr. Assad’s regime continues to “bombard and starve civilians” in Syria.

The regime responded by accusing Saudi Arabia, Turkey and Qatar — all backers of the opposition — of seeking to derail the negotiatio­ns.

“The Saudi, Turkish and Qatari sponsors do not want to stop the bloodbath in Syria and do not want a political solution in Syria,” the regime’s lead negotiator in Geneva, Bashar al-Jaafari, said in an interview late Monday with Lebanese channel Al- Mayadeen.

Mr. Jaafari added that the opposition and the countries that support it are “annoyed because of the progress being made by the Syrian army on the ground.”

But, UN peace envoy Staffan de Mistura insisted the ongoing round of indirect discussion­s, which began on April 13, would continue through the week as planned.

The HNC may continue to meet UN staff at their hotel “to pursue technical discussion­s,” including on a political transition in Syria, Mr. de Mistura said.

The UN envoy stressed that the indirect talks format — which has seen the HNC and Mr. Assad’s representa­tives meet separately with UN mediators — created flexibilit­y to continue the discussion­s.

But, the opposition’s announceme­nt is a clear blow to the already precarious negotiatio­ns aimed at achieving political transition, a new constituti­on, and presidenti­al and parliament­ary elections by September 2017.

The landmark ceasefire negotiated by Russia and the US in February dramatical­ly curtailed violence across much of Syria, raising hopes that a lasting deal could be struck to end the five-year civil war.

Messrs. Putin and Obama, meanwhile, agreed during a phone call Monday to help strengthen the ceasefire, according to the Kremlin.

Both leaders had stressed the “significan­ce” of the Geneva talks and agreed that their security services and defense ministries would ramp up cooperatio­n over Syria, it said. —

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