War in Syria
Free Syrian Army rebel trying to save his friend's life. November 2012. Source: FreedomHouse/http://www.oxfordresearchgroup.org.uk/publications/middle_east/syria_evolving_problem_competing_militias
Intra-Syrian
opposition agrees to talks in Moscow without preliminary conditions - NCC
December 27, 22:05 UTC+3
NCC leaders do not come forward with a condition of Bashar al Assad’s stepping down for launching a dialogue
NCC leaders do not come forward with a condition of Bashar al Assad’s stepping down for launching a dialogue
BEIRUT, December 26. /TASS/.
Intra-Syrian opposition groups have agreed to enter into talks with a
governmental delegation in Moscow “without any preliminary conditions,” the
Syria Alaan news agency cited the official representative of the National
Coordination Body for Democratic Change Mounzer Khaddam as saying in Damascus.
NCC leaders do not come forward with a
condition of Bashar al Assad’s stepping down for launching a dialogue.
“We realise very well that a non-violent
regime change cannot be done in the wink of an eye,” Khaddam said. “The process
needs time, taking into regard the difficulty of the current situation in
Syria.”
Khaddam recalled that leader of the
National Coordination Body Hassan Abdul Azim “has never believed in a
possibility of the violent regime overthrow and since the very beginning has
been calling for a political settlement.”
The NNC as the main body of the internal
opposition still views the Geneva Communiquй of June 30, 2012 as “a platform for talks,” Khaddam
said.
While commenting on a position of the
foreign group - the National Coalition for Syrian Opposition and Revolutionary
Forces /NCORF/ - that is hesitant about joining the Moscow meeting, Khaddam
said the NCC “calls for all units of opposition to gather in Moscow.”
“However, we won’t link our
participation with NCORF representatives’ presence in Moscow,” he said.
Earlier, an official source at the
country’s foreign ministry confirmed that Syria’s authorities are ready “to
participate in consultations in Moscow with all those who defends the country’s
sovereignty, its unity and an independent decision.”
The diplomat underscored that “the
meeting that is meant as preparatory for a conference on the dialogue reflects
the Syrians’ aspirations to peacefully resolve the crisis and to stop the
bloodshed and to restore security and stability in the whole country.”
In early December Mikhail Bogdanov, the
Russian presidential special envoy for the Middle East and Africa, said in
Beirut that Russia could “provide the Moscow floor for the contacts among
Syrians.”
“We call these contacts consultative and
preparatory, having in mind that the sides will not set forth any preliminary
conditions and there will not be an earlier agreed agenda,” he said.
The Russian diplomat pointed out that
first Moscow may host various groups of the opposition that act inside the
country or outside it.
“Next, representatives of the Syrian
government could come for the second stage [of the consultations] and later, an
agreement on more concrete formats, for instance a conference, may be
achieved,” Bogdanov said.
Earlier, the spokesman for the Russian
Foreign Ministry, Alexander Lukashevich said a meeting of representatives of
Syria’s government and opposition could be held in late January.
It “is planned as informal and so no
official invitations are expected to be sent.” Also, participation of the UN
Secretary General’s Special Envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura could not be
ruled out, he said.
The
Syrian daily Al-Watan said that preliminary consultations among the opposition
representatives are expected to take place in Moscow on January 22-23, 2015,
while the first round of consultations with members of the governmental
delegation will be held on January 24.
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