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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Bombings in Syria rattle Geneva talks

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GENEVA/BEIRUT: Syrian government and opposition delegates to peace talks in Geneva on Saturday warned of the impact on negotiations after a day of violence in Syria that included militant suicide bombings and missile strikes by the air force. The United Nations opened the peace talks with a symbolic ceremony on Thursday in Geneva, attended by representatives of the warring sides. But there has been no further direct contact with UN mediator Staffan de Mistura, who is still trying to get agreement on how the talks should be arranged. With tensions palpable among participants, the United Nations is treading carefully in its efforts to revive negotiations after a 10-month hiatus.


A ceasefire brokered by Russia and Turkey with Iran’s support is increasingly violated with groups opposed to the truce and the Geneva process also attempting to force their collapse. Suicide bombers stormed two Syrian security offices in Homs on Saturday, killing dozens with gunfire and explosions including the head of military security, prompting air strikes against the last rebel-held enclave in the western city. The militant rebel alliance Tahrir al Sham, which opposes the talks — although it has fought alongside factions that are represented there — said that five suicide bombers had carried out the attack. It celebrated with the words “thanks be to God” but stopped short of explicitly claiming responsibility.


Tahrir al Sham was formed this year from several groups including Jabhat Fateh al Sham, which was formerly known as the Nusra Front and was Al Qaeda’s Syrian branch until it broke formal allegiance to the global militant movement in 2016. Warplanes also carried out six raids on Douma in the eastern suburbs of Damascus, resulting in six deaths, and earlier, an air raid in Hama killed four people from the same family, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. Basma Kodmani, a negotiator from the opposition High Negotiations Committee (HNC), said groups backing the talks had abided by the ceasefire, but questioned the government’s commitment and whether Russia, a key Assad ally, was ready to pressure it to curb the violence.


“The ceasefire... by the way is violated today in the most horrible way,” she said. “The use of napalm yesterday and today massive air bombings on the suburb of Waer of Homs city. That is giving us very negative intentions about what the regime’s intentions are,” she said. The Syrian Foreign Ministry said it had written to the United Nations demanding condemnation for Saturday’s attack and what it called other “terrorist acts”. Damascus regards all the groups fighting against it as terrorists.  Syria’s UN envoy Bashar Ja’afari said the attack in Homs had been a message aimed at the Geneva talks and that it would “not pass unnoticed”. Although Assad’s government has controlled most of Homs since 2014, rebels still control its Al Waer district, which warplanes bombed on Saturday, wounding 50. — Reuters


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