Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad said a transitional government
amounts to a coup d’etat and “will never be accepted.” (Photo: Reuters)
By AP
Damascus, Syria
A top Syrian official urged the opposition to let go of its dream
of easing President Bashar Assad out of power in a transitional
government, complicating peace talks that resumed Wednesday in Geneva on
ending the five-year civil war.
As
Syrians voted in parliamentary elections in government-held parts of the
country - balloting the opposition dismissed as a sham - Deputy Foreign
Minister Faisal Mekdad told The Associated Press that a transitional
government amounts to a coup d’etat and “will never be accepted.”
A
transitional government is the centerpiece of the peace program that
the United States, Russia and other world powers agreed on at a 2012
Geneva Conference. The terms have been left vague intentionally and are
supposed to be worked out in the peace talks, but the presumption, at
least in the opposition’s mind, is that a transitional government means
one without Assad.
“This will not happen,
not now, nor tomorrow nor ever,” Mekdad said, speaking at his office in
Damascus ahead of the resumption of the indirect talks in Geneva that
the UN envoy says will focus on a political transition.
Assad
recently floated the idea of a national unity government, rejecting the
opposition’s demand for a transitional ruling body, and Mekdad echoed
the rejection.
“We believe such an idea
has failed, it is outdated, it will never be acceptable. This amounts in
fact to a coup d’etat. People organize a certain rebellion and then
they get power. This will never happen in Syria,” he said.
He
said most of the world except Saudi Arabia and Turkey - the two top
backers of the rebellion - have all but relinquished calls for Assad to
step down, having realized after five years of war that the president is
fighting “terrorists” in Syria.
“We
believe that if we have to proceed, then we need to forget or we need
others to forget the dreams they had for the last five years and to come
with factual, actual solutions to the problem,” he said. “This includes
the possibility of establishing a national unity government or a broad
government that includes members of the opposition.”
Syria Staffan de Mistura told reporters that his recent visits to
Iran, Russia and Syria led him to believe that those countries were
“supportive to what we are trying to do in terms of a political
transition.” (Photo: AP)
But in Geneva, UN envoy for Syria Staffan
de Mistura told reporters that his recent visits to Iran, Russia and
Syria led him to believe that those countries were “supportive to what
we are trying to do in terms of a political transition.”
“There
was no doubt on that. From Moscow to Tehran, even to Damascus, (they)
agreed with the fact that this is the agenda,” he said.
US
Secretary of State John Kerry said he spoke to de Mistura about the
talks and urged all participants “to adhere to the cessation of
hostilities.”
“There is an opportunity in
these days ahead to be able to negotiate transition according to Geneva
Communique of 2012, which is precisely what they say they want,” Kerry
told reporters in Washington. “The Iranians have signed up to it, the
Russians have signed up to it. The Turks, the Qataris, the Saudis, the
Emiratis, most of the European countries, all of the countries that are
part of the International Syrian Support Group.”
Aided
by Russian air power, the Syrian army and allied militiamen have
reversed the tide of the war in recent months, making rapid advances
against its opponents. Syria also has benefited from a US- and
Russian-engineered partial cease-fire, which has allowed it to focus on
fighting extremists like ISIS and the Nusra Front, which are excluded
from the truce agreement.
The new
250-member parliament being chosen Wednesday is expected to serve as a
rubber stamp for Assad. Western leaders and members of Syria’s
opposition have denounced the election as illegitimate and a provocation
that undermines the peace talks.
After
casting his vote with his wife, Asma, Assad said the election was one
way to defy the terrorists - the term he uses to describe Syria’s armed
opposition.
Parliamentary elections in
Syria are held every four years, and Damascus says the vote is
constitutional and separate from the Geneva talks. But the opposition
says the voting contributes to an unfavorable climate for negotiations.
Britain
said Damascus’ decision to go ahead with the elections in the war-torn
nation, where hundreds of thousands cannot take part, shows “how
divorced (the government) is from reality.” Germany said it would not
accept the results of the vote.
Assad’s
main ally, Russia, welcomed the vote, calling it necessary to prevent “a
power vacuum” in Syria until a new constitution and elections are
agreed upon in the peace talks.
In the tightly-controlled Syrian capital, voters said they fully supported holding the elections.
“My
vote is like a bullet to our enemies. I am here to continue the ongoing
resistance since five years. I am here to support the Syrian Arab
Army,” said 18-year high school student Yazan Fahes, holding up an
ink-stained finger.
Most voters said they
were mostly concerned about skyrocketing prices rather than security,
which has become less of a concern in the capital since the cease-fire.
Marah
Hammoud, a 21-year-old journalism student from the central city of
Homs, said it was important at this moment in Syria for people to choose
their representatives.
“We want elected
officials who care about the people, who can help end this war and
control prices,” she said. “We live on this hope.”
The
balloting, in which soldiers are being allowed to vote for the first
time, was carried out only in areas under government control. Voting
stations were set up in 12 of Syria’s 14 provinces.
The
northern province of Raqqa is controlled by ISIS, and the northwestern
province of Idlib is controlled by its rival, the Al-Qaeda-affiliated
Nusra Front, as well as other insurgents. The government has no presence
in either province.
While some parts of
Damascus had sizable turnout, other less-secure areas on the outskirts
of the capital and on the edge of rebel-held suburbs saw fewer people
vote. In Tadamon, outside the Palestinian refugee camps of Yarmouk,
which is largely under ISIS control, people were hesitant to vote, and
polling centers were nearly empty for most of the morning despite the
military presence.
Polls were to close at
midnight, after they were extended for five hours because of high
turnout, according to state TV. Results were expected Thursday.
As the Geneva talks resumed, de Mistura said the recent fighting in Syria amounted to “incidents, and not a bush fire.”
He
said the fragile cease-fire was holding despite a recent
“deterioration” in some areas, and he vowed to press ahead with his
efforts despite the messages coming from the Damascus government.
De Mistura said he hopes to go “deeper and deeper” toward reaching a deal on political transition in Syria - his ultimate goal.
He
hosted a delegation from the main opposition group, the High
Negotiations Committee. A delegation from Assad’s government is expected
to arrive Friday.
The two sides do not negotiate directly in the “proximity” talks. Instead, de Mistura meets with each side separately and shuttles between them.
The two sides do not negotiate directly in the “proximity” talks. Instead, de Mistura meets with each side separately and shuttles between them.
In Turkey, a
local news agency said shells fired from Syria hit a southern Turkish
area Wednesday, the fourth such cross-border incident in less than a
week.
The private Dogan news agency said
the shells struck two areas of the city center of Kilis, causing panic
despite hitting vacant land and causing no casualties. Turkey routinely
retaliates after rockets or shells land on its territory.
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