Syria Opposition Ready to Negotiate
Members of the National Coalition are meeting in Istanbul to elect a
new leader
The main Syrian opposition coalition has said it is willing to attend
an international peace conference expected to take place in Geneva next
month.
But a spokesman for the National Coalition, Louay Safi, told the BBC
that it would only go if President Bashar al-Assad agreed to step down.
Earlier, Russia said the government had agreed "in principle" to
participate.
Previous efforts to find a political solution to the conflict have
foundered on preconditions from both sides.
Meanwhile there has been further heavy fighting in Qusair, a
strategically important town between Homs and the Lebanese border.
Government forces backed by Hezbollah militants launched an offensive
to recapture Qusair on Sunday. The state news agency said on Friday a
"large number" of rebel fighters had been killed in the latest clashes.
Russia and the US are attempting to convene a conference to negotiate
an end to the violence, but have yet to finalise the date, agenda,
timetable or participants.
However, they have said any agreement should be based on the final
communique of the UN-backed Action Group for Syria meeting in Geneva in
June 2012.
The communique called for an immediate end to violence and the
establishment of a transitional government that could include officials
serving under Assad and members of the opposition. It did not state
explicitly that the president should step down.
Russia has been pressing the Syrian government to agree to dialogue,
and foreign ministry spokesman Aleksandr Lukashevich announced: "We note
with satisfaction that Damascus has confirmed its readiness in
principle to participate in an international conference in the interest
of the Syrians themselves finding a political path to a settlement of
the conflict that has been devastating for the country and the region."
The US has meanwhile focused on securing the participation of the
opposition National Coalition, which responded sceptically to the
Russian announcement.
"We were surprised that this announcement was made in Moscow, not in
Damascus," Safi told the BBC. "The first reaction is that we would like
to hear it from the Syrian government."
Speaking during a three-day opposition meeting in Istanbul, Safi said
the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary and Opposition Forces
would be willing to participate in the conference, but only if President
Assad and his associates hand over power as part of any settlement.
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