A Syrian opposition fighter aims a catapult at regime forces in the northern embattled Syrian city of Aleppo yesterday.
DAMASCUS: Syria said yesterday that peace talks are possible next month and chemical weapons experts passed the half-way mark in their inspections, as rebels killed a top military intelligence officer.
State television announced that Major General Jamaa Jamma “was martyred while carrying out his national duties to defend Syria and its people and pursuing terrorists in Deir Ezzor.”
Jamaa was in charge of military intelligence in the eastern province, where jihadist forums said he was killed in clashes with radical Islamist fighters in the city of the same name.
In Moscow, Syrian Deputy Prime Minister Qadri Jamil told reporters that proposed peace talks in Geneva could take place on November 23-24, saying “we are closer than ever to holding the Geneva 2.”
Both the Russian foreign ministry and the United Nations said the date of the conference would be decided by UN chief Ban Ki-moon.
“When it is time for an announcement, the secretary general will make one,” UN spokesman Martin Nesirky told reporters in New York.
“And I would remind you and everybody that it is the secretary general who will be convening the conference and it will be the secretary general who invites the different parties to attend.”
Russia and Western nations have been pushing since May for new talks between the Syrian regime and rebels on a negotiated solution to the conflict, which has killed more than 115,000 people since March 2011.
The Syrian opposition is divided on attending the conference, and President Bashar Al Assad’s regime says his removal from office will not be on the table at any talks. The National Council, an opposition umbrella group, said it would hold internal discussions next week culminating in a vote on whether to attend the gathering.
But Jamil said there was “no alternative” to the peace conference and that the absence of parts of the Syrian opposition would not affect the timing or format.
The international community has renewed its push for the Geneva conference in the wake of a deal under which Syria will turn over its chemical arsenal for destruction. The agreement, enshrined in a UN Security Council resolution, staved off threatened US military action against Assad’s regime in the wake of an August 21 sarin attack outside Damascus that killed hundreds.
Under the resolution, a team from the United Nations and the Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons has been in Syria overseeing the destruction of its chemical arms.
Yesterday, the OPCW, which was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize last week, said nearly half its inspections of the arsenal were complete.
“We have done nearly 50 percent of the verification work of the facilities that have been declared to us,” Malik Ellahi, a political advisor on Syria for OPCW, told journalists in The Hague.
Despite the progress, Ellahi said security remained a concern for the unprecedented mission in war-torn Syria, with mortar and car bomb attacks taking place in areas near to the inspectors’ Damascus hotel.
“There have been a number of incidents over the last few days which gives some cause for concern,” Ellahi said.
So far Damascus has won praise for its cooperation with the inspectors, but the United Nations has stressed that key deadlines be met.
These include verifying Syria’s disclosed chemical weapons, identifying key equipment, destroying production facilities and starting the destruction of Category 3 chemical weapons by November 1.
Inspectors have until June 30 next year to complete the destruction of Syria’s chemical arsenal.
The United Nations said yesterday that a Canadian staffer held by a radical group in Syria for eight months had been freed in good health and without a ransom being paid. Carl Campeau, a legal advisor with the UN force that monitors a ceasefire in the Golan Heights between Syria and Israel, was abducted on February 17 as he drove in a Damascus suburb, UN officials said.
AFP