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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Friday, December 11, 2015
Syrian rebels end talks with demand for Assad to step down
Talks in Riyadh end with statement saying president should go before any transitional period, after one of largest factions withdrew
Members of Ahrar al-Sham, one of the biggest forces on the ground in Syria (AFP)
Thursday 10 December 2015
Talks in Riyadh end with statement saying president should go before any transitional period, after one of largest factions withdrew
Members of Ahrar al-Sham, one of the biggest forces on the ground in Syria (AFP)
Thursday 10 December 2015
Syrian rebel factions have demanded that President Bashar al-Assad have
no part in any transitional government, issuing a joint statement on
Thursday after two days of crucial talks in Riyadh.
"Participants have insisted that Bashar al-Assad and his aides quit
power with the start of the transition period," said the statement,
referring to a plan set out in Vienna last month to have a "credible,
inclusive and nonsectarian" transitional government in place in the
country by June 2016.
Participants, however, did say there that they are
ready to negotiate with representatives of the Syrian regime... within a
specific timeframe that would be agreed on with the United Nations,"
the statement added.
The talks were the largest between rebel factions since the outbreak of
war in 2011. But the result - a demand for Assad to quit as president of
Syria - keeps them firmly at odds with the President's backers, Russia
and Iran, exacerbating a key issue in ending the war and echoing previous rebel demands that contributed to the failure of talks in Geneva last year.
The statement came after a day of apparently fractious talks with one of
the participants, Ahrar al-Sham, withdrawing saying it had a "religious
and national obligation" to refuse to work with "regime sympathisers".
It also complained that those at the table included only a "small number
of jihadi rebel factions" and "people who do not hide their support for
the Syrian regime".
"As we withdraw from the conference, we are calling on other Mujahedeen
and revolutionary groups to make a historic stance on the side of their
religion, nation and people," Ahrar al-Sham said in a statement.
"[Other groups] must take into consideration the sacrifices that were made to achieve their goals."
Reports later said Ahrar al-Sham had returned to the fold and would
attend future negotiations with Assad, although this was not confirmed.
PT: I’m now hearing [unconfirmed] reports that Ahrar al-Sham have reversed & agreed to sign the #Riyadh statement. Unclear if it’s amended.— Charles Lister (@Charles_Lister) December 10, 2015
'Stronger position'
Saudi Arabia’s foreign minister had earlier said the talks put Syria’s
opposition in a “stronger position” ahead of peace talks scheduled to
take place in New York later this month.
But Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said President Assad had two
choices - he must either leave power after negotiations or be forcibly
removed.
Speaking in Riyadh, Jubeir said the Syrian people would not accept any other outcome after years of devastating war.
New negotiations on Syria’s future must take place before a 1 January
deadline set last month during a landmark meeting of 20 states in
Vienna.
US Secretary of State John Kerry had also hailed the talks as “very
constructive,” saying he hopes they will help in the progress towards
finding a political solution to the conflict ahead of the New York
talks.
Points of principle
The Riyadh talks brought together 103 delegates from armed and non-armed groups – but excluded Kurdish groups.
On Thursday, the final day of the talks, delegates agreed on seven key
“points of principle” as a starting-point for ongoing negotiations.
The first of these, agreed without a strong Kurdish presence at the table, is the “unity of Syria as a land and as a people”.
Delegates also agreed on the civilian and democratic nature of a future
Syrian state, which would retain the current state’s apparatus but
completely restructure the army and security force.
A source from the Free Syrian Army delegation also confirmed to
Associated Press that the participants agreed to demand the withdrawal
of all foreign fighters from the country. Lebanon's Hezbollah, Iranian
militias, and Russian special forces are now known to be fighting for
Assad. American and UK special forces have also been authorised to
target the Islamic State group in Syria with the US-led coalition
bombing IS since last year.
US-based intelligence services organisation The Sufan Group this week
announced that up to 30,000 foreign fighters have joined jihadist
organisations across the world, including some 8,000 in the Middle
East.
The committee was to be made up of 23 people – six from the Syrian
National Coalition, six from various rebel groups, six from local
activists from across the country and five independent officials,
according to a source quoted by Al-Jazeera.
In the wake of Ahrar al-Sham’s withdrawal from the talks, it remains
unclear whether the seven points of principle remain binding.
