Syria's main opposition National Coalition re-elected Ahmad Jarba as
its leader during a general assembly meeting in Istanbul on Sunday, the
coalition said in a statement.
Jarba won 65 votes, beating his only
rival Riad Hijab -- the best-known defector from the regime of President Bashar
al-Assad -- by 13 votes.
Jarba, who is seen as close to key
rebel backer Saudi Arabia, was first elected to head the Coalition in July, and
will now lead the group for another six months.
His re-election comes at a sensitive
time, less than three weeks away from slated peace talks in Switzerland that
would bring rebels and regime representatives to the table.
The Coalition is set to discuss on Monday whether to take part in the peace talks, though a key bloc -- the Syrian National Council -- has already announced it will boycott the so-called Geneva 2 process.
That has raised fears the Coalition
may end up rejecting the talks altogether. According to council member and
veteran dissident Samir Nashar, "Ahmad Jarba does not want to go to
Geneva."
The Coalition also voted in three of
its members as vice-presidents: Noura Al-Amir, Abdel Hakim Bashar and Faruq
Tayfur, the statement said.
It was slated to vote in a new
secretary general, but has not yet agreed on whether powerful, Qatar-linked
businessman Mustafa al-Sabbagh or the current post-holder, Badr Jamous, will
take the post.
Born in 1969 in the northeastern city
of Qamishli, on the border with Turkey, Jarba is a Sunni Muslim who has tried
to convince Arab and Western nations to arm the rebels.
In his six months as Coalition
leader, he has appeared more subdued than previous opposition chiefs who had
higher profiles as veteran dissidents.
Jarba's re-election comes deep into a
crisis within the main opposition group, which is based outside Syria.
Many opponents and rebels on the
ground feel the Coalition has failed to represent them. Source: AFP
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