The latest round of the Syrian peace talks has concluded in the Swiss city of Geneva, with the United Nations hailing the negotiations as "substantive" and the talks yielding a “clear agenda” for the future of the war-ravaged Arab country.
Speaking at a press conference after wrapping up the nine-day talks in Geneva on Friday, UN Special
Envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura said the strategy for battling
terrorism would be at the core of another round of peace negotiations between representatives of the Syrian government and those of the armed opposition groups later this month.
"The
train is ready, it is in the station, it is warming up the engine.
Everything is ready, it just needs an accelerator. I believe that we
have a clear agenda now in front of us,” he told reporters.
De
Mistura also said the upcoming talks should cover maintaining a
nationwide ceasefire, "security governance, immediate
confidence-building measures" and "operational counter-terrorism
issues," adding that he felt "comfortable” that all sides could "live
with” the Geneva agenda.
The UN special
envoy reiterated that the negotiations should facilitate humanitarian
access to the Arab country, adding that he would travel to New York in
the next few days to brief UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres on the
outcome of the talks, dubbed Geneva 4.
This round of the
UN-brokered negotiations -- the first since last April -- came shortly
after the conclusion of the second round of the Syria peace talks,
facilitated by Russia, Turkey and Iran, in the Kazakh capital Astana on
February 15 and 16. The negotiations, which were held in a closed-door
setting, sought to pave the way for the latest Geneva talks.
The UN official also said that the Astana and Geneva efforts complement each other.
'Political transition discussed in depth'
Meanwhile,
the so-called High Negotiations Committee (HNC), which serves as an
umbrella group for militants and opponents of Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad in the peace talks, also announced that it had accepted the
12-point agenda given to delegates by the UN special envoy.
Nasser
al-Hariri, the head of the HNC, added that this round of talks had
"more positive" results than the previous diplomatic efforts, arguing
that issues related to political transition had been discussed in depth.
"It was first time we discussed in an acceptable depth the issues of the future of Syria and political transition,” he said.
The
term "political transition” is interpreted by the foreign-backed
opposition as the ouster of Assad or at least erosion of his powers.
For
the past six years, Syria has been fighting terrorism. De Mistura
estimated in August last year that more than 400,000 people had been
killed in the crisis until then. The world body stopped its official
casualty count in the war-torn country, citing its inability to verify
the figures it received from various sources.