Syrian opposition’s chief negotiator pessimistic about peace talks
The Syrian opposition’s chief negotiator in peace talks in Geneva said on Wednesday he was “not optimistic” about strained efforts to end the nearly five-year war ravaging his country.
Mohammed Alloush, a leading member of the powerful Army of Islam rebel group, told journalists that those pressing to form a unity government with regime members were “delusional.”
The HNC was in internal talks on Wednesday morning to discuss its next steps, after a similar and tense meeting the previous evening, an opposition source said.
Asked what the grouping would discuss today, Alloush clutched a picture of a young boy who he said had been severely wounded by Russian air strikes in Syria.
“The problem is not with (UN envoy Staffan) de Mistura. The problem is with the criminal regime that decimates children and with Russia which always tries to stand alongside criminals,” Alloush said.
His appointment as chief negotiator has been controversial. Syria’s government and Russia regularly refer to the Army of Islam as “terrorists.”
He told reporters the HNC would be taking a decision “in two days” but did not specify what that decision was.
HNC head and former Syrian Prime Minister Riad Hijab is set to arrive in Switzerland on Wednesday, an HNC spokesman said, in a potential sign of fresh momentum after talks faltered on Tuesday.
The UN-brokered talks in the Swiss city are aimed at ending Syria’s war, which has killed more than 260,000 people.
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