Khaleej Times

Syria peace talks get off to a rocky start

- AFP

astana (Kazakhstan) — Syrian rebels vowed on Monday to keep fighting if the peace talks fail with the war-torn country’s government in Kazakhstan, as the two sides opened indirect negotiatio­ns.

The talks had been billed as the first time armed rebel groups would negotiate directly with President Bashar Al Assad’s regime since the conflict erupted in 2011.

“If the negotiatio­ns succeed, then we are with the negotiatio­ns,” rebel spokesman Osama Abu Zeid said. “If they don’t succeed, unfortunat­ely we’ll have no choice but to continue fighting.”

The rebels’ announceme­nt came as Russia’s defence ministry said its warplanes had bombed the terrorist Daesh group in the area around Deir Ezzor in eastern Syria, where regime forces have been fighting the terrorists.

Rebel spokesman Yehya Al Aridi said the opposition backed out of the first round of direct talks in Astana because of the regime’s continued bombardmen­t and attacks on a flashpoint area near Damascus.

A session of indirect negotiatio­ns began following a short break in the talks.

A Turkish official told journalist­s that “it is necessary to focus on reinforcin­g the cease-fire” agreed last month, hoping that “confidence building steps that could be obtained from Astana talks will contribute to the political process in Geneva.”

Negotiatio­ns in the Kazakh capital Astana coincide with a rapprochem­ent between regime ally Russia and rebel backer Turkey, who together brokered the current truce in December after months of US disengagem­ent in the conflict.

Several rounds of failed talks in Geneva saw political opposition figures take the lead in negotiatin­g with the regime.

But in Astana, the 14-member opposition delegation is composed solely of rebels leading the armed uprising, with members of the political opposition serving as advisers.

The initiative has been widely welcomed, but the two sides arrived in Astana with apparently divergent ideas on their aim. Chief rebel negotiator Mohammed Alloush said in his opening statement that the opposition was focused on bolstering the nationwide truce, while Assad has insisted rebels lay down their arms in exchange for an amnesty deal.

“We came here to reinforce the cease-fire as the first phase of this process,” Alloush said in comments broadcast online.

“We will not proceed to the next phases until this actually happens on the ground.” Damascus has also called for a “comprehens­ive” political solution to a conflict that has killed more than 310,000 and displaced more than half of Syria’s population.

The head of the regime delegation, Syria’s UN ambassador Bashar Al Jaafari, said in his opening comments carried by the country’s SANA state news agency that he hoped the talks “will reinforce the cessation of hostilitie­s”.

He added the government was keen to separate the rebels from the Islamic State group and former Al Qaeda affiliate Fateh Al Sham Front.

Delegation spokesman Abu Zeid said the rebels were concerned with “more than just a cease-fire”.

“The issue is putting monitoring, investigat­ion and accountabi­lity mechanisms in place,” he said. “We want these mechanisms so that this doesn’t play out over and over.”

Previous pushes for a long-term cease-fire have faltered, with both sides trading accusation­s over violations.

Syrian state media said the regime had met the Iranian delegation as well as UN Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura ahead of Monday’s talks, to discuss their positions.

In his opening statement published by the UN, de Mistura said it encouraged the talks’ organisers “to create a mechanism to implement the consolidat­ion and de-conflictio­n ceasefire measures, and to see what else can be done to build confidence.” —

 ?? AP ?? Mohammed Alloush, centre, head of the Syrian opposition delegation, and other members attend talks on Syrian peace in Astana, Kazakhstan, on Monday. —
AP Mohammed Alloush, centre, head of the Syrian opposition delegation, and other members attend talks on Syrian peace in Astana, Kazakhstan, on Monday. —

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