Syrians Should Join Int'l Peace Talks: UN
TEHRAN (Tasnim) – Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said that the Syrian government and opposition should start talking to each other, as global powers seek to keep up a push aimed at ending the war.
Russia hosted de Mistura after 19 key international players met for key talks in Vienna Friday, including the United States, Iran and Saudi Arabia, in the broadest push yet to end the almost five-year conflict.
The participants – who did not include any representatives of the Syrian government or its opponents – agreed to ask the UN to broker a peace deal between the government and opposition to clear the way for a new constitution and UN-supervised elections.
Speaking after talks with Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov in Moscow, de Mistura said the United Nations was ready to bring together representatives of the Syrian government and the opposition for talks in Geneva.
“We are ready, the UN is ready, to start immediately with this process in Geneva,” de Mistura said on Thursday, AFP reported.
“When? As soon as possible,” said the envoy who returned from Damascus.
“We’ll ask the representatives of the government, and the opposition.”
Lavrov said the “entire spectrum” of Syrian society should be represented at the negotiating table and reiterated Russia’s traditional stance that the fate of President Bashar Assad should be decided by “the Syrian people.”
Russia said earlier that it could host a meeting between the Syrian government and unspecified members of the opposition next week in Moscow.
Moscow has said that it handed Saudi Arabia and the United States a list at the Vienna talks of dozens of Syrian opposition figures with whom it is liaising in a bid to thrash out who each side thinks represents the factious opposition.
Before the powers meet for another round of Syria peace talks the sides should agree on a list of “terrorist organizations” and another one on the opposition which would take part in the talks with the government “under the auspices of the UN,” Lavrov said.
Moscow previously lamented there is no agreement in the US-led coalition in Syria on who should be declared legitimate opposition to Assad’s government – or should be targeted like ISIL.