United Nations: The United Nations on Monday said it was waiting for regional powers spearheading the Syria peace process to agree on who will take part in talks starting in just one week’s time and raised the possibility of a delay.
The peace talks, the first between the Syrian government and the opposition since 2014, are scheduled to open in Geneva on January 25, but invitations have yet to be sent to the delegations.
The 17 countries pushing for a peace deal, including the United States, Russia, Saudi Arabia and Iran, have been struggling to agree on the list of opposition leaders who will have a seat at the negotiating table.
“At this stage, the UN will proceed with issuing invitations when the countries spearheading the international Syrian Support Group process come to an understanding on who among the opposition should be invited,” said UN spokesman Farhan Haq.
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon “urges those countries to redouble efforts to reach that agreement”, he said.
The Geneva talks are to pave the way to a new constitution and elections in 18 months to end Syria’s nearly five-year war, which has killed more than 260,000 people and triggered a mass refugee exodus to Europe.
The UN spokesman said there were “concerns about arrangements” that had yet to be resolved for the talks to go ahead and added: “If there is any kind of slippage, we will let you know.”
A council diplomat separately said “it’s going to be difficult” to reach agreement on the list of participants.
The regime’s advances on the ground add to the obstacles that have scuttled chances of halting the war.
“I don’t think we should expect any major results,” said Fawaz Gerges, professor of Middle Eastern politics at the London School of Economics. “[President Bashar] Al Assad really believes that time is on his side, that he is winning, that the opposition is in tatters.”
The latest victory came last week with the capture of the town of Salma, one of the most significant government advances since the Russian air campaign began. Overlooking the coast, it is only 12 kilometres from the border with Turkey, a key supporter of rebels in the area.
“The Syrian army has shifted from a defensive mode to offence,” said Gerges. “Before the Russian intervention the army was bleeding, it was desperately trying to maintain its position, but now it has achieved major tactical gains on many fronts.”
Saudi Arabia last month hosted a meeting of armed factions and opposition groups to agree on a common platform in negotiations with the Damascus regime, but Russia has said that effort did not include all players.
A key ally of the Syrian regime, Moscow wants the moderate opposition that is closer to Al Assad to take part.
“If some well-known opposition leaders are not invited, it’s going to make the delegation less inclusive than it should be,” said Russian Ambassador Vitaly Churkin.
The UN’s Syria envoy, Staffan de Mistura, told the UN Security Council during a closed-door briefing that “additional work needs to be done” before he can send out invitations, Churkin told reporters.
But he added that January 25 remained the target and that it was “important to stick to that date”.
Asked about the prospects for a delay, Uruguay’s Ambassador Elbio Rosselli, who holds this month’s council presidency said that “no different date was considered today”.
During his briefing to council members, De Mistura stressed the importance of lifting sieges and allowing more humanitarian aid to reach civilians, many of whom have been surviving on very little food.
President Vladimir Putin held talks in Moscow with the Emir of Qatar Shaikh Tamim Bin Hamad Al Thani on the Syrian crisis.
Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said both Moscow and Doha were expecting that, in accordance with a UN-backed plan, talks between the Syrian government and the opposition would begin “in the nearest future, already this month”.