Syrian peace talks to be revived next week, says John Kerry

US and Russia to renew accord that reduced fighting across several zones in Syria

The scene of an air strike in Binnish, Syria: A recent surge in bloodshed  wrecked the 10-week-old partial truce sponsored by Washington and Moscow that had allowed UN-brokered peace talks to convene in Geneva. Photograph: Ammar Abdullah/Reuters
The scene of an air strike in Binnish, Syria: A recent surge in bloodshed wrecked the 10-week-old partial truce sponsored by Washington and Moscow that had allowed UN-brokered peace talks to convene in Geneva. Photograph: Ammar Abdullah/Reuters

The 17-nation group backing Syria peace talks will meet next week, US secretary of state John Kerry said yesterday, a day after he and his Russian counterpart agreed to work to revive a "cessation of hostilities" agreement reached in February.

Mr Kerry told reporters in London he expected UN-brokered talks involving the opposing Syrian parties to take place "some days after" the May 17th meeting in Vienna of the International Syria Support Group.

“The ISSG will formally come together to build on what we did with the Russians in terms of this agreement and to talk about all kinds of things, ranging from duration, to enforcement to the political process,” Mr Kerry said.

The US and Russia, who support rival sides in Syria's five-year-old civil war, said on Monday they would strive to revive an accord that reduced fighting in parts of the country for several weeks.

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A recent surge in bloodshed in Aleppo, Syria's largest city and commercial hub before the war, wrecked the 10-week-old partial truce sponsored by Washington and Moscow that had allowed UN-brokered peace talks to convene in Geneva.

Syria’s opposition is hopeful of a return to the Geneva talks if a US-Russian deal on reviving the failed truce is swiftly implemented, a member of Syria’s opposition high negotiations committee said on Monday.

Mr Kerry said the approach of the US presidential election in November should encourage the parties to work towards an agreement, and he disagreed with those who argued otherwise. “I think it’s actually an incentive to get things done now, while you have an administration that you know is working for a political solution and that you know would be prepared to bring parties together around a reconstruction process for Syria.”

Russia's president, Vladimir Putin, said the situation in Syria remained complicated, but Moscow hoped co-operation with the US would lead to fundamental changes in the country.

Earlier, Russia’s RIA news agency quoted the Russian defence ministry as saying Moscow and Washington had agreed to extend a truce dubbed a “regime of calm” in Aleppo for another 48 hours from Tuesday.

Beaten and shot

In a separate development, the advocacy group

Human Rights Watch

said Turkish border guards had beaten and shot Syrians fleeing the violence in Aleppo. HRW said that, in March and April 2016, five people, including a child, were killed and 14 seriously injured as a result of border guards’ shootings and beatings.

A video released by HRW, purporting to show the victims of the beatings and shootings, depicted a bloodied body with bandages around his exposed torso. A senior Turkish presidency official said the authenticity of the video could not be verified. Ankara says it keeps an "open door" policy for those fleeing the five-year conflict in Syria. For over a year, however, only those requiring emergency medical treatment not available on the Syrian side have been able to cross legally. – (Reuters)