The National - News

Syria attacks continue despite talks

Activists urge regime delegation to address transfer of power as UN envoy outlines key areas for discussion

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GENEVA // Syrian activists yesterday called for the Assad government to engage in talks on political transition and for the United Nations to strengthen the fragile ceasefire as violence engulfed parts of the country.

The call came as UN mediator Staffan de Mistura told the delegation­s several more rounds of talks would be needed to reach an accord and set out governance, constituti­on and elections as three key discussion areas.

In a paper given to both sides, he said that by the end of the current session “we would have a deeper shared understand­ing of how we can proceed in future rounds” in discussing each area.

Syrian regime and opposition negotiator­s gathered in Geneva last week for a fourth round of UN- sponsored talks, but they have been overshadow­ed by deadly attacks at home.

The talks could last until March 5 – longer than scheduled – said an opposition source. The first full day of talks was Friday.

On Saturday, suicide attacks in Syria’s third city Homs killed dozens of people including a top Syrian intelligen­ce officer. Mr de Mistura said the attacks were an attempt to wreck the peace talks, while the warring sides traded blame and appeared no closer to actual negotiatio­ns.

There have been no face-to-face talks between the sides so far, with the UN envoy meeting each delegation separately as in the three previous rounds, the most recent of which was in last year.

“Our hopes are not high given the incidents on the ground and the continuous violations by the regime forces and its backers of the ceasefire,” said Mutasem Alysoufi of The Day after Syria campaign, which supports democratic transition. It is calling for the UN to strengthen a ceasefire brokered by Russia and Turkey.

Warplanes bombed rebel-held areas around several Syrian cities yesterday including in Al Waer district of Homs, and towns around Damascus, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring group said.

One person was killed in the Damascus suburb of Douma and three in Al Waer, the group said, while shells and rockets were launched at rebel areas in Deraa and Idlib provinces. Rebels fired several shells at a suburb of government-held Aleppo.

Mr Alysoufi said he did not believe the government delegation, led by Syria’s UN ambassador Bashar Jaafari, wanted to engage in serious political talks. “They are gaining more time and continuing their military strategy on the ground,” he said.

Mr de Mistura yesterday met two opposition groups that curry favour with Russia, president Bashar Al Assad’s main backer. The UN envoy has indicated to the High Negotiatio­ns Committee (HNC), which is leading the main opposition delegation, that he would like to unify the opposition groups for face-to-face talks with the government to end the nearly six-year-old conflict.

Jihadi Makdissi, a former Syrian foreign ministry spokesman who heads opponents from the “Cairo” platform, gave no sign that a unified delegation could emerge, but said he was coordinati­ng with the HNC. “We are not a fragmented opposition, we are merely diverse,” he said.

According to Mr de Mistura’s paper, the agenda for the talks is based on resolution 2254 and focuses on the three political issues for discussion. Nothing would be agreed on until everything is agreed on, the paper said.

It also reiterated that issues related to the ceasefire and fighting terrorism should be the focus of separate talks in the Kazakh capital of Astana, which are sponsored by Russia and Turkey with the support of another backer of Mr Al Assad, Iran. Meanwhile, the Syrian army and its allies advanced against ISIL in north-west Syria and near the central town of Palmyra.

ISIL forces were last week pushed out of the town of Al Bab by Turkey-backed Syrian rebels and yesterday the Syrian army took the town of Tadef south of Al Bab, state television reported. The eastward advance in an area south of Al Bab has extended Syrian army control across 14 villages. By taking ISIL territory south of Al Bab, the army is preventing any move by Turkey and the rebel groups it supports to expand southward.

This month, a senior Russian official said Tadef marked an agreed dividing line between the Syrian army and the Turkey-backed forces.

Syrian troops also moved to within 10 kilometres of Palmyra. ISIL captured Palmyra a second time in December after being forced out by government forces in March.

 ?? Abd Doumany / AFP ?? A Syrian amid destroyed buildings after a government air strike on the rebel-held town of Douma, near Damascus yesterday.
Abd Doumany / AFP A Syrian amid destroyed buildings after a government air strike on the rebel-held town of Douma, near Damascus yesterday.

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