Regime has so far refused to discuss Assad's removal as talks focusing on political transition continue in Geneva. | |||||
Middle East Online | |||||
GENEVA
- Syrian peace talks which fail to address the question of President
Bashar al-Assad's fate are "doomed to failure", a spokesman for the main
opposition grouping involved in negotiations said.
Riad
Naasan Agha, of the Riyadh-based High Negotiations Committee, said that
the talks which are set to resume on April 11 in Geneva must focus on
the future of the Syrian leader.
"If negotiations did
not address the fate of Assad, it would be a waste of time and doomed to
failure," he said late Tuesday at a forum hosted by Al-Jazeera in
Qatar.
The UN has said the upcoming round of talks will
focus on plans for a political transition to lead Syria out of five
years of brutal civil war.
Agha said that he was not
hopeful the talks would produce a positive outcome as negotiations on
forming a transitional government were almost at a "dead-end".
Negotiators
from the regime are expected to attend the talks but only after the
completion of parliamentary elections in the country on April 13.
The
previous round of talks broke up on March 24, without making any
concrete advances towards a political solution to the devastating war.
The
opposition wants Assad to leave power before any transitional
government is agreed, but the regime says his future is not up for
discussion.
The United Nations envoy on Syria, Staffan
de Mistura, on Tuesday met Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov, whose
country is a key backer of Assad, in Moscow as he prepares for the
Geneva talks.
De Mistura is also expected to visit several other countries ahead of the talks, including Iran, Turkey and Saudi Arabia.
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Thursday, 7 April 2016
Syria opposition says talks 'doomed' unless Assad's fate is addressed
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