Major powers
close to U.N.-brokered peace talks on Syria are discussing the
possibility of a federal division of the war-torn country that would
maintain its unity as a single state while granting broad autonomy to
regional authorities, diplomats said. The
resumption of Geneva peace talks is coinciding with the fifth
anniversary of a conflict that began with protests against President
Bashar al-Assad before descending into a multi-sided civil war that has
drawn in foreign governments and allowed the growth of Islamic State
militants in Syria and Iraq. Fighting
in Syria has slowed considerably since a fragile "cessation of
hostilities agreement" brokered by the United States and Russia came
into force almost two weeks ago. But an actual peace deal and proper
ceasefire remain elusive. As the
United Nations' peace mediator Staffan de Mistura prepares to meet with
delegations from the Syrian government and opposition, one of the ideas
receiving serious attention at the moment is a possible federal division
of Syria. Neither the opposition nor government has confirmed its participation in the latest round of peace talks in Switzerland. Speaking
on condition of anonymity, a U.N. Security Council diplomat said some
major Western powers, not only Russia, have also been considering the
possibility of a federal structure for Syria and have passed on ideas to
de Mistura. "While insisting on
retaining the territorial integrity of Syria, so continuing to keep it
as a single country, of course there are all sorts of different models
of a federal structure that would, in some models, have a very, very
loose center and a lot of autonomy for different regions," the diplomat
said. He offered no
details about the models of a federal division of authority that could
be applied to Syria. Another council diplomat confirmed the remarks. OPPOSITION DISLIKES FEDERALISM The
biggest sticking point in the peace talks remains the fate of Assad,
who Western and Gulf Arab governments insist must go at the end of a
transition period envisioned under a roadmap hammered out in Vienna last
year by major powers. Assad's backers Russia and Iran say Syrians
themselves must decide. After five years
of civil war that has killed 250,000 people and driven some 11 million
from their homes, Syria's territory is already effectively split between
various parties, including the government and its allies,
Western-backed Kurds, opposition groups and Islamic State militants. This
week, Syria's Saudi Arabian-backed opposition rejected a suggestion by
Russia, which like Iran supports Assad's government and has intervened
militarily on its side, that the peace talks could agree a federal
structure for the country. "Any
mention of this federalism or something which might present a direction
for dividing Syria is not acceptable at all. We have agreed we will
expand non-central government in a future Syria, but not any kind of
federalism or division," Syrian opposition coordinator Riad Hijab said. But
the idea of federalism for Syria has not been ruled out. In an
interview with Al Jazeera on Thursday, de Mistura said "all Syrians have
rejected division (of Syria) and federalism can be discussed at the
negotiations." In a September
interview Assad did not rule out the idea of federalism when asked about
it, but said any change must be a result of dialogue among Syrians and a
referendum to introduce the necessary changes to the constitution. "From
our side, when the Syrian people are ready to move in a certain
direction, we will naturally agree to this," he said at the time. The
co-leader of Syrian Kurdish PYD party, which exercises wide influence
over Kurdish areas of Syria, has made clear the PYD was open to the
idea. "What you call it isn't
important," PYD's Saleh Muslim told Reuters on Tuesday. "We have said
over and over again that we want a decentralized Syria - call it
administrations, call it federalism - everything is possible." The
next round of Syria peace talks is not expected to run beyond March 24.
After that round ends, there is expected to be a break of a week or 10
days before they resume.
Key powers mulling possibility of federal division of Syria
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