Syria peace talks to start in Geneva on Friday: UN envoy

We are going to aim at proximity talks starting on the 29th and on-going for six months, says UN envoy De Mistura


Afp January 25, 2016
UN Syria envoy Staffan De Mistura gestures at the United Nations Offices on January 25, 2016 in Geneva during a press conference on efforts to restart peace talks. PHOTO: AFP

GENEVA: Peace talks between the warring parties in Syria, which were scheduled to open Monday, will instead begin in Geneva on Friday and last for six months, the UN's Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said.

De Mistura told reporters that the start date was pushed back because of a "stalemate" over the make up of the delegations, but that the invitations to the participants were expected to be sent out on Tuesday.

"We are going to aim at proximity talks starting on the 29th and on-going for six months" De Mistura said, adding that the first round was expected to last between two to three weeks.

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"There will be no opening ceremony," the UN envoy said.

Securing a ceasefire and space to deliver humanitarian aide to suffering Syrians will be among the first priorities, he added.

"We are all feeling... the time has come to at least try hard to at least produce an outcome," De Mistura told reporters.

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The talks will mark the first time the warring sides will take part in negotiations since January 2014, when de Mistura's predecessor Lakhdar Brahimi hosted high-level but fruitless meetings in the Swiss cities of Montreux and Geneva, a round of talks known as Geneva II.

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