"We will go to Geneva with a mission of hope," U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon’s office said in a statement.
A long-awaited international conference to resolve the Syrian crisis
will be held in Geneva on January 22, bringing diplomacy into sharper
focus as a means to resolve some of the most intractable problems
besetting the region.
The United Nations (U.N.) announced the date of the conference on
Monday, a day after Iran and six global powers successfully negotiated
a landmark nuclear deal in the Swiss city.
“We will go to Geneva with a mission of hope,” said the U.N. Secretary
General Ban Ki-moon through his spokesperson, Martin Nesirky. The
conference, billed as Geneva-2, will be held within the framework of
the Geneva Communiqué that was issued in June 2012 following a meeting
of the global and regional heavyweights with Kofi Annan, the former
special envoy on Syria of the United Nations and the Arab League. The
conference had then yielded an agreement for the establishment, based
on mutual consent, of a transitional governing body in Syria that would
be armed with full executive powers, covering all government
institutions, including the military and security agencies.
The Geneva-2 conference would be the result of herculean, mostly
behind- the- scenes efforts of Russia, the United States and Lakhdar
Brahimi, the veteran Algerian diplomat, who replaced Mr. Annan as the
joint special envoy on Syria.
Persuaded mainly by Russia, the Syrian government, led by President
Bashar al-Assad had agreed to the talks even earlier. But getting the
opposition on board proved to be a tall order. However, there are now
signs that a single delegation will represent the Syrian opposition
under the umbrella of the National Coalition of Opposition and
Revolutionary Forces. The coalition’s vice-president Suheir al-Attasi
cited the removal of all obstacles by the Syrian government that were
allegedly hampering the flow of international humanitarian aid,
including food and medicines, to Syrian areas that government troops
controlled, as a precondition.
As the U.N. announced the date of the conference, hectic diplomacy was
under way in Geneva, from where the Iranians and most of their
interlocutors had just departed after successful nuclear talks, to
smoothen the path of the crucial upcoming conference. Russian
diplomats, Mikhail Bogdanov and Gennady Gatilov, began a two-day
meeting with various groups of the Syrian opposition, RIA Novosti
reported.
In parallel talks among Russia, the U.S., and the U.N. were also slated
during these days. On its part, the UN hoped that with diplomacy
promising to take root, rival parties would set the tone for
reconciliation by taking specific steps “to help the Geneva conference
succeed, including toward the cessation of violence, humanitarian
access, release of detainees and return of Syrian refugees and
internally displaced to their homes”.
Riding the wave of diplomacy in West Asia, the
Palestinians have also now begun to call for an international
conference to resolve their dispute with Israel. “We believe that after
the Geneva conference on Syria and future Geneva-2 and probably
Geneva-3 may be held,” Itar-Tass quoted Fayed Mustafa, the Palestinian
ambassador to Russia. “Perhaps, one more Geneva conference — the third
one or the fourth one may be convened… to resolve the Palestinian
problem,” he observed.
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