Syrian Foreign Minister Walid Mua’allem said on Monday his country would reject any United Nations role in monitoring the implementation of four “de-escalation” or safe zones.
“We do not accept a role for the United Nations or international forces to monitor the agreement,” Mua’allem told reporters in Damascus.
A spokesman for the UN secretary general’s special envoy to Syria, Staffan de Mistura, declined to comment on those remarks.
Mua’allem also said the United States seemed to have concluded that it must reach an understanding with Russia for a solution to the Syrian crisis.
He warned that if Jordanian forces entered Syria without coordinating with Damascus, it would be considered an act of aggression, but that Syria was not about to confront Jordan.
Speaking about the military situation inside Syria, Mua’allem said Deir Al Zor, a city and province occupied by Daesh in the east, was the “fundamental objective” for government forces and was more important to the average Syrian than Idlib, a northwestern province that is an opposition stronghold.
Asked about US backing for Kurdish groups fighting Daesh in northeast Syria, he said that what Syrian Kurds were doing in fighting the terrorist group was “legitimate” at this stage and falls within the framework of preserving Syrian unity.
Regime backers Russia and Iran and rebel supporter Turkey reached a deal on Thursday on four safe zones in Syria where the government and opposition will halt hostilities.
The deal says those areas would be bordered by “security zones” with checkpoints and observation centres “ensured by the forces of the guarantors by consensus”, but that “third-party” monitors could also be deployed.
Mua’allem on Monday said there could be a role “as the Russian guarantor has said, for military police”, but it was unclear if he was referring to Syrian or foreign units.
The multiphase plan, signed on Thursday in the Kazakh capital Astana, is one of the more ambitious efforts aimed at ending Syria’s six-year conflict.
It provides for a ceasefire, rapid deliveries of humanitarian aid and the return of refugees after “de-escalation zones” are created across stretches of eight Syrian provinces.
More than 465,000 people have been killed since Syria’s conflict erupted in March 2011.
source: GULF NEWS
GMT 20:46 2018 Friday ,30 November
Syria fires missile at Golan Heights: Israeli militaryGMT 16:44 2018 Tuesday ,18 September
Two civilians martyred by landmine blast in HasakaGMT 07:18 2018 Tuesday ,18 September
Residents of Damascus suburb Daria are returning to their homesGMT 16:11 2018 Friday ,07 September
Army tightens grip on Daesh in Sweida eastern countrysideGMT 06:31 2017 Wednesday ,20 December
Rebel shellfire kills three in DamascusMaintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Maintained and developed by Arabs Today Group SAL.
All rights reserved to Arab Today Media Group 2021 ©
Send your comments
Your comment as a visitor