Naharnet

Syria Opposition Sceptical as Russia Says Regime Will Talk

Syria's opposition on Friday urged President Bashar Assad's government to speak out on whether it will take part in an international peace conference, after Russia claimed the regime had agreed "in principle" to attend.

"We would like to hear that statement from the Assad government. This has been related to us through the Russians, I have no idea why the Syrians are silent," Louay Safi, spokesman for the National Coalition, told Agence France Presse at a meeting of the main Syrian opposition group in Istanbul.

"We need more clarity. The announcement is still very vague. And why is it not made by Damascus?"

Meanwhile, another coalition member called on Assad to prove he is working for a transition of power in the war-torn country.

"We want to stop the bloodshed. It's very important for us to have goodwill gestures, and from both sides," Khaled al-Saleh, spokesman for the Coalition told reporters in Istanbul.

"We want to make sure that when we enter those negotiations the bloodshed in Syria will stop," he added.

Saleh also renewed accusations against the regime over the alleged use of chemical weapons, this time in the town of Adra near the capital.

"In terms of us making goodwill gestures, we're ready to make those," said Saleh.

"From the regime's perspective, at least don't use chemical weapons the night before" Moscow announced Damascus' willingness to go to the negotiating table, he added.

"You know, simple things like that. Stop using Scud missiles. Withdraw the army from Syrian cities."

The peace conference, dubbed "Geneva 2" and expected to be held in June, would be aimed at ending the raging Syrian civil war, which in two years has killed more than 90,000 people.

But organizers must first get both sides to attend.

The conference was jointly proposed by Russia, a key backer of Assad, and the United States, which supports the rebels fighting to overthrow him.

Earlier Friday, Russian foreign ministry spokesman Alexander Lukashevich said Moscow had "received an agreement in principle from Damascus to attend the international conference".

Meeting in Istanbul for three days, members of the opposition have stipulated that in order for the conference to go forward, the National Coalition would need international guarantees that talks would lead to Assad's resignation.

"We would like to have guarantees particularly from the Russian side, because the Russian leadership has been defending Assad himself," said Safi.

"If the Russians will come forward and realize that they are moving against history and siding with the wrong party, then I think we are going to see a meaningful change, and that will save the Syrian people, who have suffered a lot," he added.

The Coalition's meeting began Thursday, a day after backers of the anti-Assad uprising gathered in Amman and told the Syrian regime that should it fail to work for peace, they would step up their assistance to the opposition.

"As far as the United States, France and the rest of participants in Amman's conference are concerned, the framework for Geneva 2 was clear," said another Coalition member, Khaled Khoja.

"But if they are playing with words and trying to gain time, we can't consider that the Syrian regime is really willing to talk," Khoja told AFP.

He also said only if the opposition has the upper ground in battle will the regime accept to negotiate on the rebels' terms, renewing opposition calls for military aid.

"We want the Friends of Syria (who back the uprising)... to increase their military assistance to the (rebel Free Syrian Army's) command, until Assad complies to the idea of a real political solution," Khoja added.

Source: Agence France Presse


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