This Article is From Jan 22, 2017

Syrian Rebels Meet In Kazakhstan Ahead Of Talks

Syrian Rebels Meet In Kazakhstan Ahead Of Talks

Syrian army retook Aleppo entirely after last group of rebels were evacuated. (File)

Astana: Syrian rebel delegates huddled in Kazakhstan on Sunday ahead of talks with government representatives, scheduled to begin on Monday - the first such negotiations between the two sides in a year. At the top of the agenda is an effort to consolidate a fragile cease-fire agreement reached last month and ease humanitarian suffering in the war-ravaged country. The talks in the Kazakh capital, Astana, are sponsored by Russia, Iran and Turkey, and are the latest attempt to forge a political settlement to end a war that has by most estimates killed more than 400,000 people and displaced more than half the country's population.

The UN's Syria envoy, Staffan de Mistura, is participating in the talks, which are to be followed by more political talks in February in Geneva. The new US administration is not, because of the "immediate demands of the transition," the State Department said on Saturday.

The opposition delegation, which arrived in Astana on Sunday, is made up of about a dozen rebel figures led by Mohammad Alloush, of the powerful Army of Islam rebel group. The Syrian government is sending its UN ambassador, Bashar Ja'afari, and military delegates.

At the top of the agenda is an effort to consolidate a cease-fire brokered by Russia and Turkey last month. The truce reached on December 30, which excludes extremist groups such as the ISIS and the al-Qaida affiliate in Syria, has reduced overall violence in the country but fighting continues on multiple fronts.

Yehia al-Aridi, a spokesman for the opposition in Astana, said the rebel factions are there to talk about the cease-fire and other humanitarian issues, including breaking the sieges and stopping forced displacement by the government.

He suggested that any talk about Syrian President Bashar Assad's future is off the table for now, and would be discussed in Geneva at a later stage.
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