The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

New Syria peace talks falter

- by Alan Lord

A SECOND ROUND of peace talks between the Syrian Government and the opposition got bogged down quickly over who was responsibl­e for escalating violence that has killed hundreds in the past few days and disrupted food aid for trapped civilians.

UN-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi held separate closed-door meetings in Geneva with the Syrian Government and opposition delegation­s to try to set an agenda for the coming week.

The f irst face- to- face meetings adjourned 10 days ago, having achieved little beyond getting the warring sides into the same room. This time the two appeared even further apart, with no immediate plans to even sit at the same table.

“The negotiatio­ns cannot continue while the regime is stepping up its violence against the Syrian people,” opposition spokesman Louay Safi told reporters after a 90-minute meeting with Mr Brahimi.

“It is not acceptable that the regime will send its own delegation to talk peace while it is killing our people in Syria. This must stop. We asked the internatio­nal community to do something about it.”

The opposition insists the talks’ aim is to agree on a transition­al governing body that would replace President BasharAssa­d. The Government delegation wants to focus on halting “terrorism”, a reference to the rebels fighting to topple Assad.

Meanwhile 20 civilians, including women and children, and 20 village fighters have been killed by extremist Islamic rebels in an Alawite village.

The death toll was reported as more details emerged about Sunday’s attack, in which Islamic fighters overran the village of Maan in the central province of Hama.

Extremist Sunni Islamic fighters have come to dominate the armed uprising against Assad, who is a member of the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

 ?? Pictures: Reuters. ?? A site hit by what activists say are barrel bombs dropped by Government forces on the al-Katerji district in Aleppo. Inset: children caught up in the conflict.
Pictures: Reuters. A site hit by what activists say are barrel bombs dropped by Government forces on the al-Katerji district in Aleppo. Inset: children caught up in the conflict.

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