Syrian opposition split as peace moves forge ahead
SYRIA: International efforts to end the conflict in Syria
accelerate on Monday with key talks in Brussels and Paris, amid a push
for a new peace conference despite growing divisions within the Syrian
opposition.
US Secretary of State John Kerry will meet his Russian and French
counterparts in Paris to advance an initiative for an international
conference on ending the more than two-year conflict.
However Syria’s main opposition group ended a fourth day of talks in
Istanbul on Sunday with little sign of a joint approach to the attempt
to bring all sides to the negotiating table.
The talks have been dubbed “Geneva 2” after a conference last June
that produced a peace roadmap which failed to win support, triggering
the resignation of Kofi Annan as special Syria envoy.
Ahead of the Paris meeting, the 27 EU foreign ministers meet in
Brussels, with the bloc deeply divided over whether to arm the rebels.
After months of bitter argument, the issue will come to a head as the
ministers meet ahead of the expiry at midnight on Friday of far-reaching
EU sanctions against President Bashar al-Assad’s regime including a
weapons embargo.
Britain and France are leading the push to have the arms embargo
maintained against Assad but relaxed against the Syrian opposition. But
British-based charity Oxfam has warned that allowing more weapons into
Syria “could have devastating consequences” and “fan the flames of the
conflict”.
The latest peace push comes as Syria’s leading opposition group was
in total disarray at fractious talks in Istanbul, with discussions on
their participation in the US-Russian peace initiative stalled.
There was squabbling over a vote early on Monday on expanding the
opposition umbrella group, although the results formalised the entry
into the Syrian National Coalition of veteran dissident and Marxist
intellectual Michel Kilo. Although the secular Kilo would bring in
several women and members of Syria’s religious minorities, critics said
his entry would curb the Muslim Brotherhood’s influence and force Saudi
control on the coalition.
Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Muallem upped the ante on Sunday,
saying his government would attend a new Geneva conference, terming it a
“good opportunity for a political solution”. With the conflict
spreading, Muallem said his government had agreed “in principle” to
attend the conference.
The opposition’s long-standing position is that, after more than two
years of devastation which activists say has killed more than 94,000
people, it will not negotiate until Assad quits. Recognised by dozens of
states and organisations as the legitimate representative of the Syrian
people, the opposition Coalition is marred by divisions that some
members blame on regional bids for influence.
AFP |