GENEVA / AP
Two figures from the main Syrian opposition team to the peace talks in Geneva said that they have rejected a suggestion that was put forward by the UN special envoy to Syria in which President Bashar Assad would stay in power during a transitional period and the opposition would choose three vice presidents.
The UN envoy to Syria, Staffan de Mistura, said it was not an offer but one of many ideas put forward in the attempt to find a solution for Syria’s five-year crisis.
The two officials said that the offer is not even worth considering, adding that Assad should not have any role in Syria’s future or during the 18-month transitional period during which a new constitution is to be drafted and elections held.
The announcement came after a new round of indirect peace talks resumed in Geneva on Wednesday in which the opposition’s High Negotiations Committee, or HNC, and the government delegation met separately with de Mistura.
Assad’s future has been a main point of disagreement with the opposition demanding that he has no role in Syria’s future even during the transitional period while the government delegation saying any talk about the president’s future is a red line.
De Mistura said later that “I clearly indicated that I did not share the idea” and that it “simply came up as one of the many ideas that are being floated by various experts in trying to analyze the current gap between the concepts of political transition of the government and the opposition.”
“It is therefore a storm in a tea cup,” the envoy said.
Opposition official Yahya Kodmani said in Geneva that de Mistura told them that an expert suggested to the envoy that Assad stays and in return “the three vice presidents will be from the opposition. We consider that we did not hear this suggestion because we categorically reject it.”
“We insist that a political solution be based on international resolutions and this (suggestion) is not mentioned in international resolutions,” Kodmani said insisting on a transitional governing body with full executive powers to take over power during the transitional period.
The HNC’s chief negotiator Mohammed Alloush, when asked if de Mistura gave them an offer, responded by telephone text message: “Yes it is true but it is impossible to even think about it.”
Officials at de Mistura’s office were not available for comment because of the weekend.
Earlier this week, the HNC’s spokesman Salem Al Meslet said they would accept that members of Assad’s government could be included in a possible future transitional authority — but not Assad himself.
Al Meslet said the HNC wouldn’t object to members of Assad’s coterie taking part in an internationally sought Transitional Governing Body that would help Syria emerge from war “as long as they are not involved in killing, they are not involved in crimes.” In Syria meanwhile, the IS group captured more than a dozen villages and hills during a fresh offensive in northern Syria, opposition activists said on Saturday. The IS territorial gains bring the extremist group close to the main highway that links the capital, Damascus, with the country’s largest city of Aleppo.
IS also clashed with rival insurgent groups near the border with Turkey where they have been on the offensive for days, forcing tens of thousands of residents to flee toward safer areas near Turkey.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the fighting between IS and government forces is concentrated in areas east of the town of Khanaser, which has changed hands several times in recent months.
An activist based in Aleppo said via Skype that IS launched its latest offensive in the area a day earlier and by Saturday was in control of some 18 small villages. The activist spoke on condition of anonymity for fear of reprisals from IS.
Khanaser is strategic since it’s on the highway that links government-held parts of Aleppo with the rest of the country.