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Hesitant Syria opposition begins talks with UN envoy

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AFP Geneva
Syria's main opposition group met formally for the first time today with the UN special envoy although it was unclear whether they would agree to indirect peace talks with the Assad regime.

The preliminary meeting between the High Negotiations Committee (HNC) and Staffan de Mistura came as the UN reported eight more deaths from insufficent medical care in one of the many towns besieged by government or rebel forces.

The HNC is insisting that humanitarian aid reach towns under government siege before it will agree to enter indirect talks with President Bashar al-Assad's government, which are scheduled to last six months.
 

The talks are part of the biggest push to date to chart a way out of the tangled Syrian war that has killed more than 260,000 people and forced millions from their homes since the violence began in March 2011.

The urgency to find a solution was brought home yesterday when attacks claimed by the Islamic State extremist group killed 71 people near a revered Shiite shrine outside the capital Damascus, according to monitors.

The new deaths reported today by the UN humanitarian organisation (OCHA) took place in Moadimayet al-Sham southwest of Damascus, the site of a 2013 chemical weapons attack.

OCHA said there had been a "sharp deterioration of the humanitarian situation" in the town, which has been besieged by Assad's forces since 2012 although conditions improved after a 2014 truce deal.

De Mistura's brief in Geneva is to coax the warring sides into six months of "proximity talks" as part of an ambitious roadmap agreed by the many outside powers embroiled in the war.

The plan, hammered out in Vienna in November, envisions elections within 18 months, but the key question about the future of Assad -- backed by Iran and Russia -- was left until later to resolve.

British Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond said Monday the talks "must deliver a political transition away from Assad" but experts say the West is backing off from demands that he leave before any such transition starts.

In addition to humanitarian aid, the HNC -- which only reluctantly arrived in Geneva late on Saturday -- is also demanding the Assad regime free prisoners and that its Russian backers stop bombarding civilians.

"We are here for political negotiations but we cannot start those until we have those gestures," HNC spokeswoman Basma Kodmani told reporters.

A Western diplomat said de Mistura had yesterday made proposals to a mistrustful HNC during an informal meeting, but that they were still hesitating. The nature of his proposals were not clear.

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First Published: Feb 01 2016 | 11:48 PM IST

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