A first round of peace talks
on Syria wraps up Friday with both sides in entrenched positions and the U.N.
mediator expressing frustration that it had not even been possible to get
agreement for an aid convoy to enter the besieged city of Homs.
After a week
of talks at the United Nations headquarters in Geneva, the opposing sides in
Syria’s civil war were still stuck on the question of how to proceed.
Friday’s closing
session was expected to be largely ceremonial, with government and opposition
delegates expected to meet again on Feb. 10.
“I hope that
in the next session, when we come back, we will be able to have a more
structured discussion,” mediator Lakhdar Brahimi said.
He was
“very, very disappointed” that a U.N. aid convoy was still waiting fruitlessly
to enter the rebel-held Old City of Homs, where the United States says
civilians are starving.
Diplomats
say that a top priority is to keep the talks process going in the hope that
hardline positions can be modified over time.
The sides
took a first tentative step forward on Wednesday by agreeing to use a 2012
document as a basis for discussions, but it was clear on Thursday that they are
still at odds.
Thursday’s
session, however, began with a rare gesture of harmony, when all sides observed
a minute’s silence for the 130,000 people killed during the three-year-old war.
“All stood
up for the souls of the martyrs. Symbolically it was good,” opposition delegate
Ahmad Jakal told Reuters.
But the
sides quickly shifted back to their disputes. The government delegation accused
the opposition of supporting terrorism for refusing to sign up to a resolution
opposing it.
“We
presented a proposal that the two sides might agree on the importance of
combating violence and terrorism. The other side rejected it because they are
involved in the issue of terrorism,” Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad
said.
Damascus
uses the word “terrorist” to describe all rebel fighters; Western countries
have declared some Islamist groups among the rebels, such as the Islamic State
of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), to be terrorists but consider others to be
legitimate fighters in the civil war.
One-sided
Opposition
delegates said the declaration proposed by Damascus ignored foreign fighters
from Iran, Iraq and Lebanese Hezbollah supporting the Assad government.
“The regime
today provided a one-sided communiqué. It wants to confuse ISIL with the people
of Syria who took up arms and defended their families,” opposition spokesman
Louay al-Safi said.
The 2012
agenda, known as Geneva 1, sets out stages to end the conflict, including a
halt to fighting, delivery of aid and agreement on setting up a transitional
government body.
While the
opposition wants to start by addressing the question of the transitional
governing body - which they believe would require President Bashar al-Assad to
give up power - the government says the first step is to discuss terrorism.
U.S. and
Russian officials, co-sponsors of the conference, are in Geneva advising the
opposition and Syrian government delegations, their respective allies.
The 2012
agenda, including its call for a transitional government, was drawn up at a
time when Western countries mainly believed Assad’s days were numbered. But the
past year has seen his position improve on the ground and diplomatically.
Last year
saw Washington abandon plans for strikes to punish Damascus for using chemical
weapons, ending more than two years of speculation that the West might join the
war against Assad.
Instead,
Assad agreed to give up his poison gas stocks, a complicated process that has
fallen behind schedule.
Reuters
reported on Wednesday that Syria had given up less than 5 percent of its
chemical weapons arsenal and will miss a deadline next week to send all toxic
agents abroad for destruction.
“The United
States is concerned that the Syrian government is behind in delivering these
chemical weapons precursor materials on time with the schedule that was agreed
to,” U.S. Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel said on Thursday. Reuters
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