Syria talks disappoint U.N.

Sides, mediators fail to form panel on drafting new charter

U.S. forces patrol an observation position installed in April in northeastern Syria. The area, con- trolled by its Kurdish-led Syrian allies, has been the scene of tension in recent days after Turkish forces shelled Kurdish positions nearby.
U.S. forces patrol an observation position installed in April in northeastern Syria. The area, con- trolled by its Kurdish-led Syrian allies, has been the scene of tension in recent days after Turkish forces shelled Kurdish positions nearby.

MOSCOW -- Syria's warring sides and the mediators meeting in Kazakhstan failed to agree on the formation of a committee meant to draft a new constitution that is key to ending the seven-year civil war, the U.N. special envoy to Syria said Thursday, calling it a "missed opportunity."

Staffan de Mistura was in the Kazakh capital of Astana where Russia, Turkey and Iran are holding talks with the Syrian government and the opposition on steps to bring peace to the country.

The committee had been expected to be formed before the end of the year.

At issue is the 50-member delegation comprising Syrian experts, civil society, independents, tribal leaders and women that de Mistura was authorized to put together by countries attending a Russian-hosted Syrian peace conference in the Black Sea resort of Sochi on Jan. 30.

Agreement has already been reached on a 50-member delegation from the government and a 50-member delegation from the opposition for the drafting committee.

Although Syria's close ally Russia announced the Sochi agreement, control over the constitutional process has been a key point of conflict between President Bashar Assad's government and the international community and Syrian opposition.

Assad has said his government will only consider amendments to the current constitution, in defiance of the Sochi agreement to have the government, opposition and independents draft a new document.

"Special envoy de Mistura deeply regrets that at a special meeting in Astana with the three Sochi co-conveners, there was no tangible progress in overcoming the ten-month stalemate on the composition of the constitutional committee," said a statement released by his office.

It added that this was the last meeting in Astana this year and it "has, sadly for the Syrian people, been a missed opportunity to accelerate the establishment of a credible, balanced and inclusive, Syrian-owned, Syrian-led, UN-facilitated constitutional committee."

U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres echoed de Mistura's assessment that this was "a missed opportunity," U.N. spokesman Stephane Dujarric said.

"This was an opportunity to move forward," Dujarric said. "Things did not move forward and we're obviously disappointed."

De Mistura said he plans to report to the Security Council in December before stepping down from the post. He will be replaced by veteran Norwegian diplomat Geir Pedersen.

Russian envoy for Syria Alexander Lavrentyev told Russian news agencies after the meeting that the work to form the committee may stretch into next year.

De Mistura's statement came hours after Syria's U.N. ambassador urged Western powers to lift crippling economic sanctions against the war-torn country if they are serious about helping millions of Syrian refugees to return to their homeland.

Bashar Ja'afari spoke in Astana where the mediators are speaking separately to the warring sides, which are not meeting face to face.

Nearly 6 million Syrians have fled the civil war, now in its eighth year, to neighboring countries and Europe, and about 400,000 have been killed. Syria and Russia insist that the refugees can safely return home now while many Syrians fear that they will face persecution.

Ja'afari said that lifting the sanctions imposed on Syria would be "the real test" for the West.

Europe says it will keep its sanctions in place as long as "repression" continues in Syria, extending the measures to 2019.

Ahmed Tumah, Syrian opposition representative in Astana, said the return of refugees should be arranged only after there is a political solution in place.

"Our problem with the regime is political," he said. "The regime doesn't want to take any step on the political level, only militarily."

Meanwhile, U.S forces set up new observation points in a Syrian town controlled by its Kurdish-led Syrian allies along the border with Turkey in northeastern Syria. The area has been the scene of recent tension after Turkey forces shelled Kurdish positions there.

U.S.-led coalition spokesman Sean Ryan said Thursday that the forces are securing locations for manned observation posts along the border "to support security and stability" in the area. Ryan said the posts are not permanent structures and aim to keep "all parties focusing" on fighting Islamic State group militants, who still have a stronghold to the south.

Information for this article was contributed by Suzan Fraser, Sarah El Deeb and Edith M. Lederer of The Associated Press.

A Section on 11/30/2018

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