U.N. Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura opened a new round of peace talks on Wednesday seeking renewed pledges to uphold a truce he said had been shaken by serious incidents but "not a bushfire".
GENEVA: U.N. Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura opened a new
round of peace talks on Wednesday seeking renewed pledges to uphold a
truce he said had been shaken by serious incidents but "not a bushfire".
"In spite of the several and serious incidents, the
cessation of hostilities is still holding, particularly when we compare
to what used to be," de Mistura told reporters in Geneva.
But he said repeated "incidents" would damage confidence in
the partial ceasefire, which began on February 27 and does not include
Islamic State or al-Qaeda linked groups.
"And that is why perhaps it would be good timing for a
reaffirmation by those who have been supporting and promoting the
cessation of hostilities in their faith and determination in protecting
it. At the beginning of the second round of talks that would be a
significant help."
Since the last round of talks ended on March 24, de Mistura
has travelled to Moscow, Damascus, Tehran and Amman. Officials in all
four capitals had indicated support and interest in a discussion aiming
at a political transition in Syria, he said.
"None of them actually expressed any doubt that that is the priority and the agenda," he said.
De Mistura was speaking after meeting negotiators from the opposition
High Negotiations Committee for the first session of the new round of
talks.
The head of the opposition negotiating team, Asaad al-Zoubi,
said establishing a transitional governing body was the top priority
this time around.
The government's negotiators are expected in Geneva on
Friday after vote-counting from elections held in government-controlled
areas on Wednesday in a show of support for President Bashar al-Assad.
Zoubi described Assad as a "disease" that Syria needed to be rid of.
He said the Syrian government had committed more than 2,000 breaches of the truce and dropped 420 barrel bombs in March.
"This is a clear sign that the regime is a terrorist regime and is not serious about seeking a political solution," he said.
The government has denied dropping barrel bombs. It has said
its opponents are responsible for violations of the truce, which a
senior official close to the Syrian government said on Tuesday had
effectively collapsed.
Since February, 133,819 people have been uprooted by fighting, mainly
in Aleppo and Hasaka governorates in northern Syria and in Deraa in the
south, the U.N. refugee agency UNHCR said on Wednesday.However, "significant returnee movements have been reported elsewhere in southern Syria, due to the relative calm and the sharp decrease in ariel bombardment," it said in a report.
(Reporting by Tom Miles; Editing by Philippa Fletcher)
- Reuters
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