(Reuters) - The
next meeting between some Syrian opposition figures and the Damascus
government in Moscow will take place in about a month, Qadri Jamil, a
participant in this week's consultations, said on Friday. The Moscow talks,
which ended on Thursday, are not seen as yielding a breakthrough as they
were shunned by the key political opposition and did not involve the
main insurgent groups fighting on the ground in Syria. "The
key thing is that the process started rolling," said Jamil, a of member
Syria's tolerated internal opposition who served as deputy prime
minister from 2012 to 2013. He was speaking through a translator at a
news conference. At the
end of the talks, Russian moderator Vitaly Naumkin, presented what he
called "the Moscow principles" - a list of provisions he said the
government and the opposition delegations endorse in principle. The
10-point list largely echoes Moscow's own stance on the conflict, which
has killed more than 200,000 people since protests against President
Bashar al-Assad started in early 2011 and then descended into a war in
which radical Islamists have now gained the upper hand among the
anti-Assad forces. "We
were hoping for better results than those reached in the end," Majid
Habbo of the opposition National Coordination Committee said, speaking
through a translator. "But
it is very important that it creates better conditions to continue the
Geneva process," he said of peace talks that stalled early last year.
The "Moscow principles", among others, urge fighting terrorism in Syria. But they do not include opposition calls to free political prisoners and address the problem of those kidnapped or missing. Speaking
by a large Assad portrait in the Syrian embassy in Moscow, the head of
the Damascus government delegation, Bashar al-Ja'afari, said after the
talks that the opposition members attending failed to come up with a
unified stance. Moscow has been a long-standing ally of Assad, whose government has dubbed many of its opponents as terrorists. Russia says combating terrorism should be a top priority in Syria.
It called on the opposition to join forces with Assad to that end and
criticized Washington for refusing to cooperate with Damascus over air
strikes on Islamic State positions. Syria
opposition figures who shunned the meeting in Moscow dismissed it as an
attempt to prop up Assad and quoted Russia's backing for the Syrian
president as the main reason. They said they would only take part in
talks that lead to his dismissal. Those
who attended broadly agree that fighting Islamic State and other
extremist Islamic groups on the ground comes first, and that the fate of
Assad could only be decided later.
Next round of Syria talks in Moscow in a month: delegate
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