(Reuters) - The
new head of Syria's Western-backed political opposition cast doubt on
Monday on whether members of his group would attend talks in Russia this month aimed at finding a solution to the nearly four-year Syrian conflict. Moscow, one of
President Bashar al-Assad's top allies, wants to gather Syrian
government and opposition figures on Jan. 26-29 to try to revive peace
diplomacy. If members of the main opposition body shun them entirely it
will undermine the effort, even if the organization has lost influence
on the ground. "I don't think anybody in the coalition is ready to go to Russia. All of the coalition is committed to the Syrian people and not to Russia," said Khaled Khoja, president of the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces, which is based in Turkey. The
sides are polarized over the role of Assad in Syria's future, a major
stumbling block to any settlement in a war that has killed around
200,000 people and displaced millions since 2011. Assad
has dismissed calls to step down by opposition groups and their Western
and Arab allies, while the rise of hardline jihadist groups like
Islamic State, at the expense of Western-backed rebel fighters, has
complicated matters further. Khoja,
who was elected late on Sunday, told journalists that Moscow had not
invited the Coalition as a group but had sent out invitations to some
members, who in turn said there was no agenda or format for the meeting. Describing Russia
as "one of the enemies of the Syrian revolution", he said it was
impossible for the Coalition to go to the talks unless the aim was to
build a transitional administration with full governing powers. Two
rounds of peace talks early last year in Geneva failed to find a
solution to the crisis, which started with civilian street protests and
has since spiraled into a civil war that has convulsed the wider region. Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov has said the Moscow meeting would be a
"warming-up" process before a potential third round of Geneva talks and
Assad's government has said it was willing to participate. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which tracks the conflict, said on Monday that 6,553 civilians had died as a result of Syrian air force strikes in Syria in 2014, with the northern province of Aleppo the worst hit. Syria's government says it is fighting a war against militants funded by foreign countries.
Syrian opposition leader casts doubt on Russia peace talks

Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.