Associated Press -
AP10ThingsToSee - In this image from amateur video obtained by a
group called Ugarit News, a rebel runs from an explosion,
Sunday, May 19, 2013 in Qusair, Syria. An intense battle drove
rebels from large parts of Qusair, part of a withering
government offensive aimed at securing a strategic land corridor
from Damascus to the Mediterranean coast.
By Associated
Press,
Updated: Friday, May 24, 7:02 AM
BEIRUT — The
Syrian government has agreed “in principle” to
attend a conference proposed by Russia and the
United States on ending the country’s civil war,
Russia’s Foreign Ministry said Friday, the first
confirmation that President Bashar Assad’s
regime would be willing to take part in the
talks with the opposition.
Despite the announcement from Moscow, one of
Assad’s staunchest allies, Damascus has not
issued a definitive statement of its own on the
proposed talks.
Russia and the U.S. joined efforts earlier this month
to convene an international conference to bring
representatives of Assad’s regime and the opposition to
the negotiating table. The aim of the talks would be to
establish the outlines of a transitional government as a
way out of the crisis.
More than 70,000 people have been killed and several
million displaced since the uprising against Assad
erupted in March 2011 and escalated into a civil war.
The main opposition Syrian National Coalition has not
yet said whether it will attend the conference in
Geneva, expected within two weeks, and is currently
discussing its position at a gathering in the Turkish
city of Istanbul. But members have said they want
guarantees that Assad’s departure is foremost on the
agenda.
The U.S.-Russia plan, similar to the one set out last
year in Geneva, calls for talks on a transitional
government and an open-ended cease-fire. Washington,
along with key European and Arab supporters of Syria’s
opposition, said Wednesday that Assad must relinquish
power at the start of a transition period. Russia,
however, has not committed to Assad’s departure and the
Syrian leader has said he will not step down before his
term ends next year.
The Moscow announcement Friday came after days of
talks there between Syria’s Deputy Foreign Minister
Faysal Mekdad and Russian officials.
Russia’s Foreign Ministry spokesman Alexander
Lukashevich said in televised remarks that the Syrian
government has “agreed in principle” to participate in
the conference.
“We note with satisfaction that we have received an
agreement in principle from the Syrian government in
Damascus to participate in the international conference,
in the interest of Syrians themselves, to find a
political solution,” Lukashevich said.
But he said it is impossible to set the date for the
conference at this point because there is “no clarity
about who will speak on behalf of the opposition and
what powers they will have.”
Lukashevich also said Moscow “was not encouraged” by
the results of recent meetings of members of the Syrian
National Coalition.
In the Syrian capital of Damascus, legislator Sharif
Shehadeh confirmed the government intends to attend,
though no official statement has been issued yet. “The
expectations and the opinion within the Syrian
leadership is that it will most definitely attend the
conference,” Shehadeh told The Associated Press.
He said there should be no preconditions by the
opposition or the regime because “if we start off with
preconditions, we will end up in failure and this is
something Russia is making clear to the opposition.”
At the Syrian National Coalition’s three-day gathering in
Istanbul, an opposition figure expressed doubts over Moscow’s
announcement, questioning why Damascus has said nothing.
“We are very supportive of the (U.S.-Russian) initiative. Our
fear is that the regime is not going to negotiate in good faith.
We would like to hear enough (from Damascus) to know that they
are serious about these negotiations,” said Louay Safi.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry on Thursday acknowledged
the difficulties of launching peace talks. “Nobody has any
illusions about how difficult, complicated, what a steep climb
that is,” he said during a visit to Israel.
Fighting continued across Syria on Friday, and state media
reported that rebels fired mortar shells at the central prison
in the embattled northern city of Aleppo, killing and wounding
several inmates.
The pro-opposition Aleppo Media Center said clashes were
underway between rebels and government troops at the prison,
where a large fire had broken out. State-TV reported later
Friday that troops repelled the attack on the jail and killed
several gunmen.
A week earlier, Assad’s forces repelled a rebel raid on the
prison aiming to free hundreds of political prisoners.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said
intense fighting also continued in the western Syrian town of
Qusair, near the border with Lebanon.
Government forces have been trying to recapture the town
since Sunday. State-run news agency SANA said troops killed a
“large number” of rebels in the latest clashes.
The Beirut-based Al-Mayadeen TV, which has several reporters
embedded with Syrian troops in Qusair, said government forces
are advancing inside the nearby town of Hamdiyeh in an attempt
to cut the rebels’ last supply line.
In neighboring Lebanon, Lebanese supporters and opponents of
Assad fought overnight in some of the worst fighting in the port
city of Tripoli in years. Security officials said the death toll
since Sunday reached 25, including three soldiers.
The officials, who spoke on condition of anonymity in line
with regulations, said 200 people were wounded in the fighting.
The city was quiet during the day Friday apart from sporadic
shooting.
____
Associated Press writers Nataliya Vasilyeva in Moscow and
Ayse Wieting in Istanbul contributed to this report.
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