World powers meet in desperate bid to halt Syria crisis

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    GENEVA: World powers meet today in a desperate bid to salvage international envoy Kofi Annan’s peace plan for Syria to end 16 months of bloodshed and agree on a transition plan for the strife-hit country.

     

    A crunch meeting hours ahead of the talks between US Secretary of State  Hillary Clinton and Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov led Moscow to issue  an upbeat outlook for the conference, saying a deal was likely.
       
    But Washington took a more cautious line, warning of persistent differences  between the US’ and Russia’s approach and dampening hopes of crucial progress  needed to stop the crisis that according to rights monitors has left 15,800  dead since March last year.
       
    Annan had announced the meeting on Tuesday, inviting Clinton, Lavrov, and  the foreign ministers of Britain, China, France, Iraq, Qatar, Turkey and Kuwait  to the talks, and conspicuously leaving Iran and Saudi Arabia out.
       
    He circulated a proposal on a “Syrian-led transition” that could help save  his peace process that has been largely ignored by both the ruling regime and  opposition since it came in force on April 12.
       
    Fighting has only intensified in recent weeks and rights monitors said more  than 230 people — most of them civilians — had been killed across the  strategic Middle East country since Thursday.
       
    But doubts grew over the fate of Saturday’s meeting as it drew nearer, due  to Russian opposition to Annan’s proposal on the composition of an interim  Syrian government. 
       
    Annan’s draft, seen by AFP, sees power handed to an interim Syrian team  without those “whose continued presence and participation would undermine the  credibility of the transition and jeopardise stability and reconciliation.”    The wording appears to imply — without saying so directly — that  President Bashar al-Assad would have to relinquish his grip on the presidency  for the idea to succeed.
     
    Russia angrily rejected the suggestion, while Western powers warned there  was no point meeting in Geneva if there was no prior agreement on the issue.
     
    But after Friday evening’s talks with Clinton, Lavrov said he “detected a  shift” in Washington’s approach to ending the bloodshed that no longer involved  a specific demand for Assad to leave.
     
    “There were no ultimatums. Not a word was said about the document now being  discussed in Geneva being completely untouchable,” Lavrov told reporters in  reference to wording that suggest no future role for Assad.
     
    “I can confidently say that we have a very good chance tomorrow in Geneva  to find a common denominator and mark a path forward,” Lavrov added.
     
    “We agreed to find a consensus that rests on a clear understanding... that  the Syrian sides must be stimulated toward dialogue, but that the decision to  what the state looks like and who occupies which posts can only be decided by  the Syrians themselves.”    A conflicting message came from Lavrov’s deputy, Gennady Gatilov, who  tweeted early on Saturday that experts in Geneva had thus far failed to agree  to the wording of a final document on Syria because “the Western partners want  to determine the political process themselves.”    The US account of the Lavrov-Clinton meeting was also more measured and  appeared to suggest little agreement on the future of Assad.
     
    A senior US State Department official noted some progress while conceding  that “there were still areas of difficulty and difference” between the  approaches of Russia and the United States.
     
    “But out of respect to Kofi Annan, they agreed we should all go to Geneva  tomorrow to try to produce a result,” said the official.
     
    "Iran’s UN ambassador Mohammed Khazaee meanwhile criticised the exclusion of  Tehran from the meeting, hitting out at Western powers, “particularly the  United States,” for ignoring the “power and influence of Iran.”    The United States and European nations opposed the presence of Iran, a long  time ally of Assad. Diplomats said Russia opposed Saudi Arabia because of its  support for the Syrian opposition. --  AFP
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