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Syrian peace talks suspended as regime rolls back rebels
By Maya Gebeily with Rouba El Husseini in Beirut
Geneva (AFP) Feb 3, 2016


Syria army cuts rebel supply route in Aleppo
Aleppo, Syria (AFP) Feb 3, 2016 - Syrian troops backed by Russian warplanes Wednesday cut the last supply route linking rebels in Aleppo city to the Turkish border, a military source said, in a major blow to the opposition.

Aleppo, Syria's pre-war commercial capital, has been divided between loyalists in the west and rebels in the east since fighting erupted in the northern city in mid-2012.

President Bashar al-Assad's forces backed by Lebanon's Hezbollah and other militias encircled Aleppo from the west, south and east, and have advanced from the north since last week.

In addition to losing their lifeline from Turkey, which supports Syrian rebels, the opposition forces are now threatened in parts of Aleppo that they have held for three years.

Since launching their assault on Monday, pro-regime forces have taken several villages and towns, including Maarasset al-Khan.

On Wednesday, the army broke a three-year rebel siege of two government-held Shiite villages, Nubol and Zahraa, and took control of parts of the supply route, the Syrian military source told AFP.

"Heavy air strikes by Russian planes" supported the army in its advance, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group.

The Observatory, which relies on a network of sources on the ground for its reports, said the regime's gains were the most significant development in Aleppo province since 2012.

"The pro-regime forces have encircled the rebel quarters in Aleppo from the south, east and north," said Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman.

This left the rebel fighters with only a single opening in the northwest which gives them access to the neighbouring province of Idlib.

- Peace talks halted -

"If they manage to continue their advance, they may then block this single access" route and totally besiege the rebels, he said.

"The regime forces have done in three days in Aleppo what they had failed to do in three years, thanks mainly to Russian support."

The development came as UN special envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura announced on Wednesday a "temporary pause" until February 25 of troubled talks aimed at ending the country's brutal conflict.

"I have concluded frankly that after the first week of preparatory talks there is more work to be done, not only by us but the stakeholders," de Mistura told reporters in Geneva.

His comments came after several days of fruitless talks aimed at starting indirect negotiations between the Syrian government and opposition.

The hoped-for six months of indirect "proximity talks" are part of an ambitious roadmap agreed by outside powers embroiled in the conflict in November in Vienna.

Russian planes have carried out heavy air strikes throughout the area north of Aleppo city in past days.

The government advance comes almost exactly a year after the failure of a similar regime offensive aimed at reaching Nubol and Zahraa and severing rebel supply lines into Aleppo city.

The current offensive is one of several which the government has launched since Russian strikes began on September 30.

More than 260,000 people have been killed in Syria since the conflict started with anti-government protests in March 2011.

Talks aimed at securing peace in Syria were suspended Wednesday as President Bashar al-Assad's regime secured a major battlefield victory against rebels and his ally Russia vowed no-let up in air strikes.

"I have indicated from the first day I won't talk for the sake of talking," UN special envoy Staffan de Mistura said in Geneva after failing over several days to get peace negotiations off the ground.

"I therefore have taken the decision to bring a temporary pause (until February 25). It is not the end or the failure of the talks."

The announcement came as Syrian troops, helped by days of Russian air sorties, cut the last supply route linking rebels in Aleppo to the Turkish border, in a major blow to the opposition.

Aleppo, Syria's pre-war commercial capital, has been divided between loyalists in the west and rebels in the east since fighting erupted in the northern city in mid-2012.

Assad's forces backed by Lebanon's Hezbollah and other militias encircled Aleppo from the west, south and east, and have advanced from the north since last week.

In addition to losing their lifeline from Turkey, which supports Syrian rebels, the opposition forces are now threatened in parts of Aleppo that they have held for three years.

On Wednesday, the army broke a three-year rebel siege of two government-held villages and took control of parts of the supply route, the Syrian military source told AFP.

"The regime forces have done in three days in Aleppo what they had failed to do in three years, thanks mainly to Russian support," said Rami Abdel Rahman of British-based monitoring group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

The offensive is one of several the government has launched since President Vladimir Putin threw Russia's military might behind Assad, adding to support from Iran, on September 30.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Wednesday he saw no reason for the air strikes to stop.

"Russian air strikes will not cease until we truly defeat the terrorist organisations ISIL and Jabhat al-Nusra," Russian agencies quoted Lavrov as saying in Oman.

He was referring to the so-called Islamic State group, the extremist outfit which has overrun swathes of Syria and Iraq and claimed bombings and shootings worldwide, and to Al-Qaeda's Syrian branch.

The opposition -- and Western countries -- says the Russian strikes have almost entirely targeted other rebel groups, many of them backed by the West, Gulf states and Turkey.

- Tangled conflict -

Since the conflict began in March 2011, more than 260,000 people have died and more than half of Syria's population have fled their homes -- many heading to Europe, creating a political headache there.

In addition, the tangled conflict has ruined the economy and dragged in a range of international players.

The United Nations said last month that an estimated 486,700 people in Syria were living under siege, more than half of them under government blockade, among 4.6 million people in so-called "hard-to-reach" areas.

World leaders will gather in London on Thursday for a donor conference to try to raise $9 billion (8.3 billion euros) to help Syrians and neighbouring countries affected by the crisis.

- Doomed from the start? -

The regime's new success on the ground helped undermine de Mistura's efforts in recent days to coax the warring sides into six months of indirect peace talks, set out in a November roadmap proposed by outside powers.

But problems had beset the Geneva gathering from the outset.

The opposition umbrella group High Negotiations Committee (HNC) arrived several days late, and reluctantly, insisting on immediate steps to alleviate the dire humanitarian situation.

This included aid getting through to besieged cities, a halt to the bombardment of civilians and the release of thousands prisoners, including some children, languishing in the Assad regime's infamous jails.

The HNC was also outraged that as peace talks were due to start in Geneva, a major offensive was happening on the ground.

The government delegation meanwhile complained that the HNC was disorganised, had not named its negotiators and contained individuals it considered "terrorists".

One such figure is Mohammed Alloush, a leading member of Islamist rebel group the Army of Islam and nominally the HNC's chief negotiator, who arrived in Geneva late on Monday.

"The problem is with the criminal regime that decimates children and with Russia which always tries to stand alongside criminals," he said, clutching a photo of a young boy he said was hurt by Russian air strikes.

The next step is for the International Syria Support Group (ISSG) of outside countries to convene, potentially on February 11 in Munich, Germany.

burs/stu/pdw


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Kerry urges Syria rebels to negotiate despite Russia bombings
Rome (AFP) Feb 2, 2016
US Secretary of State John Kerry urged Syrian opposition negotiators to remain in peace talks despite the fact that they are still under bombardment by the regime's ally, Russia. Speaking as the Geneva peace process still in disarray, Kerry promised that a ceasefire would be rapidly implemented if only the two sides could begin to negotiate. An opposition coalition has sent envoys to the ... read more


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