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UN envoy turns to US, Russia to give impetus to Syria talks
By Reuters - Mar 23,2016 - Last updated at Mar 23,2016
Staffan de Mistura, United Nations Special Envoy of the Secretary General for Syria, arrives for a meeting with the delegation of the High Negotiations Committee during the Syria peace talks at the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, Tuesday (AP photo)
GENEVA — The UN special envoy on Syria said he hoped a meeting between the US and Russian foreign ministers on Wednesday would give impetus to peace talks where the divisive issue of a political transition is stalling progress.
Syria's government delegation has rejected any discussion of the future of President Bashar Assad, who opposition leaders say must go as part of any transition. Damascus has repeated its long-held view that "counterterrorism" — its reference to rebel foes of Assad — should be the main focus of the process.
"We are looking with great interest, expectation, hope that the talks in Moscow will be productive," UN envoy Staffan de Mistura said after meeting the opposition High Negotiations Committee (HNC) in Geneva.
"Honestly not everything will be solved in one day — but [it would be] productive ... to resume the talks with a much more in-depth address on the issue of political transition," he said ahead of the planned meeting in Moscow between US Secretary of State John Kerry and Russian counterpart Sergei Lavrov.
De Mistura, who tried to keep an air of optimism before the talks adjourn on Thursday, describes Syria’s political transition as “the mother of all issues”. Emboldened by the Russian and US muscle that pushed the warring parties to the negotiating table, he has refused to drop the subject.
After five years of conflict that has killed over 250,000 and caused the world’s worst refugee crisis, Washington and Moscow engineered a deal three weeks ago for a cessation of hostilities and crucial humanitarian aid to besieged regions.
But the deal, not signed by any of the warring parties, remains fragile and diplomats are concerned that, after more than a week of talks, it is at risk of collapsing unless headway on the matter of political transition is made soon.
“We always needed some help from Mr Kerry and Mr Lavrov because they proved in the past and I hope they will prove in the future that when they do have a common understanding, it helps enormously the process,” De Mistura said.
Russia, along with Iran, have been Assad’s major allies in the conflict, while the United States and Gulf Arab powers have backed rebel forces to varying degrees.
On Monday, the head of Syria’s government delegation rejected any talk on the fate of Assad, reiterated that the Geneva talks must concentrate on counter-terrorism.
Bashar Ja’afari accused De Mistura, a veteran Swedish-Italian diplomat, of “filibustering” and “wasting time” after Damascus received no responses to proposals made a week ago.
Arguments over Assad’s fate were a major factor in the failure of UN efforts in 2012 and 2014 to end the civil war.
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