The UN envoy for Syria called yesterday for elections in the war-ravaged country in 18 months, as the opposition announced it will attend fresh peace talks next week.
But in a worrying development ahead of the negotiations, government raids were reported to have killed five civilians in Syria’s second city, Aleppo, despite a ceasefire.
The truce has prompted a nearly two-week lull in fighting between the Russian-backed regime and non-jihadist rebels since coming into force on February 27.
World powers are counting on the ceasefire to hold for a new round of indirect negotiations between the opposition and the government due to start on March 14 in Geneva.
The Riyadh-based High Negotiations Committee, the main Syrian opposition grouping, agreed yesterday to attend the UN-backed talks.
The HNC said in a statement that its delegation would focus on creating a “transitional governance body with full executive powers”.
It insisted that President Bashar al-Assad “will have no place” in a future government.
A plan agreed by world powers last year called for six months of negotiations followed by a transitional government, a new constitution and elections within 18 months.
Assad’s regime announced last month that it would hold parliamentary elections on April 13 instead, drawing criticism.
UN envoy Staffan de Mistura has said “substantive” talks will begin on Monday in Geneva and last no longer than 10 days.
The first day of negotiations would start the countdown to both presidential and parliamentary elections in Syria under UN observation, he said.
“New elections... should be held 18 months from the start of talks, that is from March 14,” de Mistura told Russia’s RIA Novosti state news agency yesterday, in comments translated into Russian.
That would mean elections around mid-September 2017.
In addition to planning the polls, the focus of the Geneva negotiations will be on the formation of “an inclusive new government” and a new constitution, according to de Mistura.
“I hope that during the first stage of talks, we reach progress at least on the first question (of the new government), it doesn’t matter whether this is on paper,” he was quoted as saying.
A source close to Syria’s government said earlier this week that its delegation would be attending the talks beginning on Monday.
Previous diplomatic efforts to resolve the complex conflict have failed.
The war, which will enter its sixth year next week, has killed more than 270,000 people and displacedmns.
The chief prosecutor for the Yugoslav war crimes tribunal said yesterday that those behind atrocities in Syria must eventually be held to account.
“As an international prosecutor and somebody who believes in justice... it is obvious that sooner or later accountability will be needed for the crimes committed in Syria,” Serge Brammertz said.
The last round of UN-sponsored talks collapsed in Geneva in February amid a fierce Russian-backed government offensive in Aleppo province.
Since then, regime fighters and rebels have largely abided by a partial truce that has seen a dramatic drop in air strikes, fighting and deaths.
But the government air strikes on Aleppo city yesterday threatened the delicate ceasefire, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.



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