Latest update : 2016-04-28
The United Nations mediator on Thursday called on the leaders of the United States and the Russian Federation to salvage the “barely alive” two-month-old ceasefire in Syria and revitalise the damaged peace process.
UN Special Envoy Staffan de Mistura voiced deep concern at the truce unravelling
in Aleppo and at least three other hotspots, although he saw some
narrowing of positions between the government and opposition visions of
political transition.
“Hence my appeal for a US-Russian urgent initiative at the highest level, because the legacy of both President Obama and President Putin is
linked to the success of what has been a unique initiative which
started very well. It needs to end very well,” de Mistura told a news
conference.
The United States and Russia must convene a ministerial meeting of
major and regional powers who compose the International Syria Support
Group (ISSG), he said.
“There is no reason that both of them which have been putting so much
political capital in that success story and have a common interest in
not seeing Syria ending up in another cycle of war should not be able to
revitalise what they have created and which is still alive but barely.”
The main opposition High Negotiations Committee (HNC) pulled out of the formal talks a week ago, in protest of intensified fighting and slow aid deliveries.
“How can you have substantial talks when you have only news about
bombing and shelling? It’s something that even I find it difficult, can
you imagine the Syrians?” de Mistura said, adding he aimed to resume
talks in May, though he gave no date.
Bashar Ja’afari, who led the government delegation, said on Tuesday
the round had been “useful and constructive.” But he gave no sign of
ceding to the HNC’s central demand for a political transition without
President Bashar al-Assad.
De Mistura, asked whether Assad’s future was discussed, replied: “We
didn’t get into names of people... but actually how to change the
current governance. And I must say that the concept of a new government
and a political transition with a new constitution is quite a lot
already in terms of preparing of what could be the next steps.”
He issued a document saying the two sides remain far apart in their
vision of a political transition, but shared some “commonalities,”
including the view “that the transitional governance could include
members of the present government and the opposition, independents and
others.”
De Mistura said this round of talks had been “overshadowed by a substantial and indeed worrisome of cessation of hostilities.”
“The perception is that it could collapse any time,” he said.
In the past 48 hours there had been an average of 1 Syrian civilian
killed every 25 minutes and one wounded every 13 minutes, he said.
The latest victims included “the last pediatric doctor” in rebel-held
eastern Aleppo, killed in an air strike on a hospital on Wednesday, he
said.
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