Yahoo – AFP,
Simon Sturdee and Fran Blandy, 14 Nov 2015
Vienna
(AFP) - World diplomats agreed Saturday on a path to Syrian elections in 18
months at talks in Vienna driven by a fresh sense of urgency after the Paris
attacks, although the fate of President Bashar Al-Assad remained a sticking
point.
The wave of
attacks that left nearly 130 dead in Paris dominated the second round of talks
to end the war in Syria, spurring delegations from 20 countries and
organisations to find common ground despite deep divisions.
German
Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said delegates had agreed a transition
government in Syria should be set up in six months and elections held in 18 months.
"No
one is lying to themselves about the difficulties we are facing, but the
determination to find a solution has progressed in 14 days," since the
first round of talks in Vienna, Steinmeier said.
A final
statement after the meeting said that the goal was to bring Syrian government
and opposition representatives together by January 1.
"This
political process has to be accompanied by a ceasefire. That will help to end
the bloodshed as quickly as possible and I might add that will help rapidly to
define who wants to be considered a terrorist and who is not," said US
Secretary of State John Kerry.
"Make
no mistake that resolve has only grown stronger in the wake of this unspeakable
brutality," Kerry said of the attacks in Paris which were claimed by the
Islamic State group operating out of Iraq and Syria.
"It is
respect for life and for its possibilities that drove our efforts today in
Vienna."
Syria war
'bleeds into all nations'
In almost
five years, the war in Syria has left 250,000 dead, sparked a refugee crisis in
Europe and birthed the Islamic State group whose actions have hit several
nations at the negotiating table in Vienna.
"The
impact of this war bleeds into all nations, from the flood of desperate
migrants seeking refuge... to the foreign fighters who make their way into
Syria ... to self-radicalised fighters living among us, their minds poisoned by
Daesh's propaganda and lies," said Kerry.
Witnesses
said that the gunmen in the Paris attacks had blamed France's military
intervention in Syria against Islamic State (IS) extremists.
Vowing
France would not stop its "international action", Foreign Minister
Laurent Fabius said in Vienna that the killings underlined the need to
"increase the international coordination in the struggle against
Daesh," referring to another name for IS.
Russian
Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov agreed, saying the attacks were "no
justification" to ease up on tackling radical jihadists such as IS and the
Al-Nusra Front, affiliated to Al-Qaeda.
EU foreign
policy chief Federica Mogherini said the countries sitting around the table
have "almost all experienced the same pain, the same terror", citing
the recent Russian plane disaster in Egypt and suicide bombings in Beirut and
Turkey.
These
countries agreed that the UN would lead consultations to determine the
modalities of the ceasefire, which will not involve operations against the
Islamic State, Al-Nusra Front and other groups yet to be determined.
The
countries gathered in Vienna agreed that the elections will be held according
to a new constitution and will be administered by the United Nations.
The final
communique agreed that the diaspora should be allowed to vote in the elections,
a key sticking point in negotiations.
![]() |
The West
insists Syrian President Bashar al-Assad (pictured) must go, while
Russia and
Iran support the regime (AFP Photo/Alexey Druzhinin)
|
Assad's
role
The crux
issue of the role of Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad remained unsolved.
Western and
Arab countries want him out of the way to let a transitional government unite
the country behind a reconciliation process and defeat IS.
But Russia,
carrying out air strikes against Syrian rebels since late September, is
sticking by Assad along with Shiite Iran, which does not want a
Sunni-controlled Syria.
"Obviously
those of us who met in Vienna today... did not agree on all issues when it
comes to Syria. We still differ obviously on the issue of what happens to
Bashar al-Assad," said Kerry.
"This
war cannot end as long as Bashar al-Assad is there," he said.
Kerry said
comments by Assad blaming France's actions in Syria for the attacks in Paris,
showed he "is not fit to be the leader of his country."
The next
meeting on Syria is expected in about a month.



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