A
delegation from Syria's main opposition group flew to Geneva on Saturday to
assess whether to join Damascus government officials in United Nations-brokered
peace talks, an opposition representative said.
The 17-strong team included the head of the
Saudi-backed Higher Negotiation Committee (HNC), which includes political and
militant opponents of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in the country's
five-year civil war.
The HNC has said it wants to discuss humanitarian
issues including a stop to Russian and Syrian government bombing before
engaging in the peace talks that started on Friday in Geneva.
Russian air strikes on Syria have killed nearly 1,400
civilians since Moscow started its aerial campaign nearly four months ago, a
group monitoring the war said on Saturday.
"We are going to Geneva to put to the test the
seriousness of the international community in its promises to the Syrian people
and to also test the seriousness of the regime in implementing its humanitarian
obligations," Riyad Naasan Agha said.
"We
want to show the world our seriousness in moving towards negotiations to find a
political solution," he told Reuters.
French
Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius said on Saturday the Geneva talks must ensure
human rights are upheld as participants work towards a political transition in
Syria.
"Humanitarian law must be respected and the
objective of a political transition actively pursued to enable the talks to
succeed," Fabius said in a statement sent to Reuters.
The
HNC's demands include allowing aid convoys into rebel-held besieged areas where
tens of thousands are living in dire conditions, Agha said.
The medical charity Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF)
said on Saturday that 16 people have starved to death in the
government-besieged town of Madaya since aid convoys arrived this month and
blamed the authorities for blocking medical supplies shipments.
Agha
said the opposition delegation, including HNC head Riad Hijab and chief
negotiator Asaad al-Zoubi, would not call for a complete cessation of
hostilities but would demand an end to "the indiscriminate shelling of
markets, hospitals and schools by the regime and its Russian backers".
Russia and Syria deny targeting civilians, saying
they take great care to avoid bombing residential areas.
In
separate comments before heading to Geneva, Zoubi said they would not engage in
any negotiations before these goodwill measures were taken.
He
said U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry gave assurances by phone to the HNC's
leadership, saying Washington supported a UN-backed political transition period
without Assad - a bone of contention among warring parties.
No comments:
Post a Comment