The fate of
President Bashar al-Assad will play no part in talks to end the Syrian
war, the head of the government's delegation said, leading the U.N.
peace envoy to warn that lack of progress on the issue could threaten a
fragile cessation of hostilities. Damascus
delegate Bashar Ja'afari said Assad's future had "nothing to do" with
the negotiations, which entered their second week on Monday, insisting
that counter-terrorism efforts remained the priority for the government. "The
(terms of) reference of our talks do not give any indication whatsoever
with regard to the issue of the President of the Syrian Arab Republic,"
he said when asked about the willingness of the government delegation
to engage in serious talks on political transition. "This is something already excluded." U.N.
envoy Staffan de Mistura - who describes Syria's political transition
as "the mother of all issues" - responded by saying the government
delegation's refusal to discuss it could lead to a deterioration of the
situation on the ground. "Everyone
more or less agrees, the cessation of hostilities is still holding," he
said. "The same ... more or less for the movement on humanitarian aid.
But neither of them can be sustained if we don't get progress on the
political transition." The
fragility of the three-week-old cessation, which was backed by the
United States and Russia, was highlighted on Monday when Moscow said it
had recorded six violations in the last 24 hours. The
Syrian opposition accused the government delegation of wasting time by
refusing to discuss the future of Assad. "It is not possible to wait
like this, while the regime delegation wastes time without achieving
anything," said Salim al-Muslat, spokesman for the opposition High
Negotiations Committee. DESERT CITY Arguments over
Assad's fate were a major cause of the failure of previous U.N. peace
efforts in 2012 and 2014 to end a civil war that has killed more than
250,000 people and caused a refugee crisis. The
five-year-old conflict between the government and insurgents has also
allowed Islamic State to take advantage of the chaos and take control of
areas in the east of the country. Fighters
from the jihadist group - which is excluded from the ceasefire deal -
killed 26 Syrian soldiers on Monday west of Palmyra, a monitoring group
said, after days of advances by government forces backed by Syrian and
Russian air cover. Russian
President Vladimir Putin said last week that the Syrian army would soon
recapture Palmyra from Islamic State, which has held the desert city for
nearly a year. Palmyra
has both symbolic and military value as the site of ancient Roman-era
ruins - mostly destroyed by Islamic State - and because of its location
on a highway linking mainly government-held western Syria to Islamic
State's eastern stronghold. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the fighting took place about 4 km (2 miles) west of Palmyra. It
was not possible to independently verify the death toll. Syria's state
news agency SANA said the army and allied forces, backed by the Syrian
air force, carried out "concentrated operations" against Islamic State
around Palmyra and the Islamic State-held town of al-Qaryatayn, about
100 km further west. After more
than five months of air strikes in support of Assad, which turned the
course of the civil war in the government's favour, Putin announced the
withdrawal last week of most Russian forces. But Russian planes have
continued to support army operations near Palmyra, according to the
Observatory and regional media. (Reuters)
Syrian regime refuses to discuss Assad's future

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