Agence France
Presse ASTANA: A new round of Syria peace talks backed by powerbrokers Russia, Iran
and Turkey kicked off in Kazakhstan's capital Astana Thursday, the Central Asian country's foreign
ministry said.
Delegations from Russia, Iran and Turkey along with Syrian
regime representatives and a 20-strong opposition delegation had all arrived in Astana for two days
of talks, a ministry spokesman said.
The UN's envoy for Syria, Staffan de
Mistura, is expected to attend the second day of talks on Friday, the ministry
said.
On Thursday, he will meet Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov and
Defense Minister Sergei Shoigu in Moscow.
The eighth round of talks come
after Russian leader Vladimir Putin ordered a partial withdrawal of Russian forces during a surprise
visit to the war-torn country last week.
Moscow has spearheaded the talks
in Astana since the start of the year as it tries to turn its game-changing military intervention
into a negotiated settlement.
The Kremlin also hopes to convene a political
congress in the Black Sea resort of Sochi which would bring together regime officials and the
opposition to reinvigorate a hobbled peace process.
The Astana talks will
also focus on shoring up the buffer zones, as well as issues including humanitarian aid and freeing
prisoners, the foreign ministry has said.
A fragile ceasefire brokered at
the end of last year by Moscow and rebel-aligned Ankara has been bolstered somewhat by the
negotiations in Astana, which began in January and have continued in parallel to fruitless UN-led
talks in Geneva.
Recent rounds of talks in Kazakhstan have focused on
implementing a Russia-led plan for four "de-escalation zones" to stem fighting between government
and rebels.
A year on from the devastating and strategically crucial regime
victory in Aleppo, Damascus has consolidated control over much of the country, wresting territory
from extremist factions not party to the truce, particularly Daesh
(ISIS).
Diplomatic contacts between the major parties in the conflict have
intensified in recent months, but there is no sign that Damascus and its armed opponents are any
closer to a political settlement.
Since the start of Syria's war in 2011,
numerous diplomatic attempts to halt the conflict have stumbled, mainly over the future of President
Bashar Assad.
The war has left more than 340,000 people dead, according to
the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. |