UN peace envoy to Syria Lakhdar Brahimi has said that he was pressing
on with plans for a conference aimed at ending the fighting, though no
firm date is in sight.
"It is extremely difficult to bring people who have been killing
one another for two years just by a magic wand to a conference like
this. It will take time, but I hope it will happen," Brahimi told a
handful of reporters on the sidelines of an event in Washington
yesterday.
"There are still issues that have not been solved. We are
hopeful. That's all we can say." The talks, dubbed Geneva 2, were
initially planned for
late May after the idea was first floated during a Moscow meeting
between US Secretary of State John Kerry and his Russian counterpart
Sergei Lavrov.
But amid difficulties on agreeing who should sit at the table,
the calendar slipped into June, and then July, with the best estimates
now hoping for a date in September.
There is also disagreement between the United States and Russia
about whether Iran should attend the talks, which are aimed at bringing
together the opposition and the Syrian regime to find a political
solution to end a conflict that is now in its third year.
"The United Nations have made it very clear that we would like
all countries... with interests and/or influence (to) attend Geneva, and
that includes Iran," Brahimi told the reporters.
And amid debate in Washington about arming the Syrian opposition,
Brahimi said the UN stand was also very clear. "Arms do no make peace.
We would like to see the delivery of arms stopped to all sides." Another
major problem is divisions between the Syrian opposition that is
fighting to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, Brahimi earlier
told an audience gathered at the Carnegie Endowment for International
Peace.
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