Tuesday 9 February 2016

Kingdom and US push cease-fire ahead of Syria talks

WASHINGTON: Saudi Arabia and the US will push for an immediate cease-fire in Syria at international talks later this week, their top diplomats said.
US Secretary of State John Kerry and Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al-Jubeir met in Washington to prepare for broader negotiations in Munich in Thursday.
There, the 17-nation International Syria Support Group will debate ways to restart a struggling UN-led effort to get Syria’s warring parties to the table.
Kerry and Al-Jubeir said they hoped the contact group, which includes the Syrian regime’s allies Russia and Iran, would agree to a rapid cease-fire on the ground.
“We have a tremendous stake in trying to resolve the problems in the region before they consume all of us,” Al-Jubeir said, giving brief remarks with Kerry.
Both Kerry and Al-Jubeir cited UN Security Council resolution 2254, which calls for a cease-fire and humanitarian access to besieged Syrian towns.
“And we hope that when we meet in Munich in the next few days, we’ll be in a position where we can make progress on that goal,” Kerry said.
Russia was among the countries which approved UNSC 2254 in December but has continued to bomb opposition positions on behalf of Bashar Assad’s regime.
The continued bombardment of opposition-held towns was among the reasons given by the Saudi-backed opposition coalition for not cooperating with the UN peace talks.
UN envoy Staffan de Mistura is trying to get the Geneva cease-fire talks back on track, but is relying on the ISSG countries to pressure the warring parties.

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