Syrian government
and opposition parties at peace talks in Geneva are expected to agree
on Thursday to a document drawn up by a U.N. special envoy outlining
basic principles in what one diplomat described as a "baby step"
forward. With a fragile
ceasefire in place in Syria, negotiations are due to adjourn on Thursday
after almost two weeks of discussions and to resume in April. The
talks are part of a diplomatic push launched with U.S. and Russian
support to end more than five years of war in Syria that has killed more
than 250,000 people, created the world's worst refugee crisis and bred
the rise of Islamic State. Progress
has been slow, with government officials avoiding any talk on the
divisive issue of a political transition or the fate of President Bashar
al-Assad, who opposition leaders say must leave office. But U.N. envoy
Staffan de Mistura has said he aimed to establish if there were any
points held in common by the different parties and if successful, to
announce them. "Basic principles
have been laid out. De Mistura wants to announce that all sides have
agreed so that he can move on to the transition issue at the next
round," said a senior Western diplomat. "It's a baby step, but a
necessary step. It's not a bad result." The
diplomat, speaking on condition of anonymity, said the document
contains 10-12 points ranging from agreeing to a united national army,
the need to fight terrorism, and ensuring a democratic non-sectarian
state with equal rights for all. A Middle Eastern
and another Western diplomat also said they expected de Mistura to
announce broad principles enabling him to move on to the subject of a
political settlement. Randa
Kassis, who heads a Moscow-backed opposition group, confirmed de Mistura
had informed delegates of the basic principles paper. Government
negotiator Bashar Ja'afari said on Wednesday that a U.N. document would
be reviewed in Damascus ahead of the next round of talks. After meeting
European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini, a rare encounter
with a senior Western figure, Ja'afari sounded positive saying he
believed the round of talks had broken the diplomatic impasse. But
he was told by Mogherini and de Mistura that accelerating a political
transition in Syria was the only way to defeat insurgent groups like
Islamic State.
Syria war parties to agree on U.N. basic principles paper: diplomats

Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.