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Opposition Platforms seek joint committee next Geneva round

 (Zaman Al Wasl)- Syria’s key opposition groups to form permanent committee for the next round of Geneva peace talks as the seventh round ends Friday, head of Moscow platform Qadri Jamil said.

The revival of Bashar al-Assad regime due to the ultimate support of Russia has changed the political equation in Syria and such demands to oust him not  anymore first demand for the International Community that celebrates ISIS defeat in Raqqa and Mosul, analysts say.

Abdulhakim Bashar, member of the Riyadh-based High Negotiations Committee (HNC) said a paper of 15 articles will be discussed when the representatives of Cairo, Riyadh and Moscow platforms meet in the upcoming weeks.

George Sabra, former opposition chief negotiator in Geneva said having one unite opposition group is an old demand but we have to agree on common ground in regard to Bashar al-Assad future. Changing the regime is the priority and not the opposition, Sabra added.

U.N. mediator Staffan de Mistura said on Thursday that regime and opposition negotiators could soon hold face-to-face talks for the first time.

He did not expect the HNC to unite with two other dissident groupings, the "Moscow" and "Cairo" platforms, in time for direct talks with Syria's government during this round.

But asked if it could happen before the next round of Geneva negotiations, slated for late August, de Mistura told reporters: "Perhaps even earlier."

The Moscow and Cairo platforms each comprise a handful of activists and are named after the cities where they first convened, at meetings held with Russia's approval and support. They do not control territory on the ground or have strong links with armed groups engaged in the war.

De Mistura was speaking before a meeting with regime negotiator Bashar al-Ja'afari, promising to "go into much more substance on the political side".

The glacial pace of the Geneva talks, which some observers see as simply a way of keeping an avenue for peace talks open in case of an unexpected breakthrough, owes much to the fact that de Mistura has to meet each delegation separately.

Some diplomats suspect the Moscow and Cairo platforms, which are much less opposed to al-Assad than the HNC is, are little more than a mechanism created by Assad's ally Russia to prevent direct negotiations and force the HNC to dilute its stance.

"It’s always been a trap for the opposition laid by the Russians, through their continual needling of the HNC about there being more than one opposition, which is mostly nonsense with the relative weight of these groups," a Western diplomat said.

"If the HNC succeed in defusing this trap, and coming together with the Moscow and Cairo groups in some way, then it puts Ja’afari under quite a lot of pressure."

Another Western diplomat said it was a "Russian narrative" that the various groups needed to unite.

"I feel this is a lever the Russians will keep to destabilize the opposition, they want to have a handle to weaken the opposition, therefore to have a handle on the process as such.

 "To us, the broader the opposition the better, but at the same time the most important thing is to have an opposition that is cohesive, can act as one party in the political process."

The three opposition groupings have recently held technical talks, aligning their positions to the extent that they might be able to field a single delegation, if not a united one.

"We're coming together on substance, not just principles but operationally," HNC negotiator Basma Kodmani told Reuters. "We're building an alternative to Assad." (With Reuters)

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