Khaleej Times

Syrian opposition seeks to put up a united front

Istanbul meeting to decide about Geneva peace talks

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istanbul — Syria’s fractured opposition began meeting on Saturday in Istanbul to decide whether to attend a peace conference that world powers want to hold in Geneva.

The talks involving the main umbrella opposition, the National Coalition, took place in a hotel here as the rebels retook a strategic base in northern Syria.

They were due to continue through on Sunday evening, the coalition said.

Before they decide whether to attend the peace conference — aimed at launching negotiatio­ns between President Bashar Al Assad’s regime and its opponents — bitter rival camps in the opposition must first seek a united front, UNArab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi warned earlier this week.

“There should be two delegation­s from Syria for Geneva 2 — the government and the opposition,” Brahimi said on Tuesday. But, he added: “The opposition is divided and not ready... The opposition has problems.”

The National Coalition — which depends on foreign backing — has long been plagued by regional rivalries and suffers from a lack of credibilit­y in the eyes of both its allies and the various rebel groups fighting on the ground.

Some rebel leaders believe that no negotiatio­ns are possible with Assad remaining in power and have for weeks resisted the idea of peace talks.

Assad is showing no sign of backing down, two-and-a-half years into a conflict that has claimed more than 120,000 lives.

No date has yet been agreed for the conference, dubbed Geneva 2, at which world powers hope to gather delegates from the warring parties, as well as regional Arab states, before the end of the year, according to Brahimi.

“We are leaning towards not tak- ing part in the conference,” said Samir Nashar, a member of the Coalition. “Will that position change? I don’t know, but what I can say is that there’s intense (internatio­nal) political action (pushing towards participat­ion).

“In politics everything is possible.”

Coalition leader Ahmat Jarba has imposed strict conditions for the opposition to take part, insisting that Assad’s departure and regime change are on the table — which the regime has rejected.

Jarba is also demanding a ceasefire for the duration of the talks.

The Syrian National Council — a key component of the Coalition — has outright refused to take part in talks, threatenin­g to quit the Coalition if some of its members agree to go.

Damascus too has appeared unwilling.

Informatio­n Minister Omran Al Zohbi said this past week the regime would refuse to go if it was “to hand over power as desired by (Saudi Foreign Minister Prince Saud) Al Faisal and certain opponents abroad”.

Meanwhile Russian vice foreign minister Mikhail Bogdanov said that some opposition members have accepted an offer of informal talks in Moscow to precede the Geneva conference.

The opposition has “rightful hesitation­s” about Geneva 2 in- cluding its format, and the future role of Assad, Turkey’s foreign ministry said this week.

At a meeting of foreign ministers in Britain last month to help pave the way for Geneva 2, 11 Western and Arab nations from the Friends of Syria group agreed that Assad should have no role in any future government.

Their affirmatio­n neverthele­ss failed to convince the rebels to commit to Geneva.

A monitoring group, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, said on Saturday that Syrian rebels have regained control of a strategic base near Aleppo internatio­nal airport in fierce fighting that left more than 50 people dead. —

 ?? Reuters ?? A Free Syrian Army fighter prepares to fire an improvised mortar shell towards forces loyal to the Syrian regime in Deir Al Zor. —
Reuters A Free Syrian Army fighter prepares to fire an improvised mortar shell towards forces loyal to the Syrian regime in Deir Al Zor. —

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