Cape Argus

‘Stay out of constituti­on’

Syria tells outgoing UN envoy that Damascus will not allow any foreign interventi­on

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SYRIA’S top diplomat told the outgoing UN envoy yesterday to stay out of matters concerning the war-torn country’s constituti­on, state media reported, while the UN official said they had “a very intense exchange of opinions”.

Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem reportedly told UN envoy Staffan de Mistura that the constituti­on is a “sovereign” matter and that Damascus will not allow any foreign interventi­on or meddling in it.

The remarks were carried by the state-run SANA news agency after the two met in Damascus.

De Mistura announced he would resign for personal reasons earlier this month after years of mediating peace talks that led nowhere.

But he said he hoped to broker an agreement on advancing a new constituti­on for Syria before stepping down next month.

The opposition has called for a new constituti­on that would allow for a political transition away from the Assad family’s decades of rule. But after a string of major victories, the government shows little interest in making any concession­s.

“During the meeting we had a very frank, a very intense exchange of opinions concerning the constituti­onal committee and the political process in general,” De Mistura told reporters after the meeting. He said he will not elaborate because he still has to brief the UN secretary-general and the Security Council.

A statement released by De Mistura’s office later said the UN envoy will be engaging in “intensive further consultati­ons” to explore the possibilit­y of convening a Syrian constituti­onal committee.

Al-Moallem was quoted by SANA as saying that “the constituti­on and everything related to it are purely a sovereign affair that is decided by the Syrian people without any interventi­on.” De Mistura told the Security Council last week that while there is agreement on the 50-member government and opposition delegation­s for the drafting committee, the government objects to a third 50-member delegation the UN put together representi­ng Syrian experts, civil society, independen­ts, tribal leaders and women.

De Mistura has been trying since February to set up a constituti­onal committee as a key step toward elections and a political settlement to the more than seven-year Syrian conflict, which has killed some 400 000 people.

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