The United
Nations struggled to save Syrian peace talks as Damascus and its Russian
allies seized territory in fierce fighting and rifts widened among
embattled rebel factions. The
Syrian army said on Wednesday its forces had broken through rebel
defenses to reach two Shi'ite villages in Aleppo province which had been
besieged for three years. Rebels said the breakthrough came after
hundreds of bombing raids by Russian warplanes. Aleppo
factions, reeling from an "unprecedented" onslaught, issued an
ultimatum to the opposition delegation late on Tuesday at the so far
still-born Geneva talks late on Tuesday, a source close to the talks
said. They threatened to bring
down the peace negotiations within three days unless the offensive by
government and Russian forces ended. U.N.
envoy Staffan de Mistura announced the formal start two days ago of the
Geneva negotiations, the first attempt in two years to negotiate an end
to a war that has killed 250,000 people, driven a huge wave of refugees
and empowered Islamic State. But talks have not even begun, and pessimism over their chances has grown. "It
seems the first phase of preparations (for talks) will take a much
longer time than expected," government delegation chief Bashar
al-Ja'afari told Reuters in an interview in Geneva on Wednesday. "The official discussions did not take off yet unfortunately. We are still discussing how to proceed." Ja'afari said the government was still unclear on who it would be negotiating with from the fragmented opposition side. "I
couldn't tell you much about what's going on because we are waiting for
Godot, and Godot hasn't come yet," he said, referring to Samuel
Beckett's never-resolved play "Waiting for Godot". De Mistura said on Tuesday the process could collapse but it was essential to get it going. "If
there is a failure this time after we tried twice at conferences in
Geneva, for Syria there will be no more hope. We must absolutely try to
ensure that there is no failure," he told Swiss television RTS. The
opposition's chief coordinator Riad Hijab, who diplomats say is a
unifying figure for the disparate rebel side, arrived in Geneva and was
joined by de Mistura for talks at a hotel used by the opposition. NO END TO RUSSIAN STRIKES The
Levant Front rebel group said the breaking of the sieges of the Aleppo
villages of Nubul and Zahraa came only after "more than 500 raids by
Russian airplanes". One commander
said opposition-held areas of the divided city were at risk of being
encircled entirely by the government and allied militia, and appealed to
foreign states that back the rebels to send more weapons. "How
can you accept to enter negotiations when you have unprecedented
military pressure? The Russians and regime want to push the opposition
out of Geneva so the opposition bears the responsibility for the
failure," said a senior Western diplomat. Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said his country had no intention of ending its campaign. "Russian strikes
will not cease until we really defeat terrorist organizations like (The
al Qaeda-linked) Jabhat al-Nusra. And I don't see why these air strikes
should be stopped," he said at a news conference in Oman's capital
Muscat. Diplomats and opposition
members said they were taken by surprise when de Mistura called for
immediate efforts to begin ceasefire negotiations despite there being no
official talks or goodwill measures from the Syrian government. The
opposition has said it will not negotiate unless the government stops
bombarding civilian areas, lifts blockades on besieged towns and
releases detainees. The Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the violence in the
country, said Russian and Syrian warplanes launched dozens of strikes on
the rebel towns of Hayan and Hreitan in northern Aleppo on Wednesday. A U.S. official in Geneva called for an end to "the daily bombing of civilians by Russian and regime aircraft". "We’re
appalled that the regime seems to view humanitarian access as a topic
for debate at the talks in Geneva," the official said, stressing that UN
Security Council Resolution 2254 already called for an immediate end to
attacks on civilians. SIEGES When
asked about opposition demands for the government to lift sieges and
allow humanitarian convoys into cities, including the rebel-held town of
Mouadamiya, Ja'afari said the government had regularly sent convoys to
it and other cities. On Sunday,
the United Nations said Mouadamiya, a town of 45,000 on the southwest
edge of Damascus, faced a new siege by government forces. "We
can't cut and paste with regard to the interest of the people,"
Ja'afari said. "Everything in Syria is important, everything is a
priority for us. "The issue of selecting Mouadamiya or another area or town is a public relations campaign launched by the so-called opposition." Senior
Syrian opposition negotiator Mohamed Alloush, representing the major
rebel group Jaish al-Islam (Islam Army), said it would be insufficient
for the government to allow a convoy into the town. "It’s
a step to silence the Syrian people," he told Reuters. "It’s a good
step but it’s not enough and the problem is not in Mouadamiya. The
problem is in 22 besieged cities." UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon called for "a strong show of solidarity"
at a conference in London on Thursday on humanitarian aid for Syria. "We
have at least 400,000 people stranded in besieged villages," he said at
least 15 besieged villages," he said, adding that only a tiny
percentage were receiving aid. "It is very difficult for us, very
dangerous." Lebanon said it
would ask international donors at the meeting for $12 billion over the
next five years to cope with more than a million Syrian refugees.
U.N. tries to breathe life into Syria talks, but fighting rages on

Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.