UN Syria envoy: Constitutional talks 'a disappointment'

Geir Pedersen said he presented a proposal to the constitutional committee but his proposal was rejected by the representatives of the Syrian regime and accepted by the opposition.

Geir O. Pedersen, UN Special Envoy for Syria, speaks during a press conference at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, on August  21, 2020.
AP

Geir O. Pedersen, UN Special Envoy for Syria, speaks during a press conference at the European headquarters of the United Nations in Geneva, Switzerland, on August 21, 2020.

The United Nations Special Envoy for Syria has voiced deep frustration that the Syrian Constitutional Committee failed to start drafting a new charter at its latest session after the regime delegation rejected proposals.

The committee, comprising representatives of Syria's regime, opposition and civil society, has a mandate to draw up a new constitution leading to UN-supervised elections. This week in Geneva it held its fifth session since October 2019.

Representatives of the regime leader Bashar al Assad rejected proposals by the Syrian opposition as well as the envoy's own ideas for moving the process forward, Geir Pedersen said.

"I told the 45 members of the drafting body that we can't continue like this, that the week has been a disappointment," Pedersen told a news conference.

Pedersen said he hoped to go to Damascus soon to discuss resolving the issue and would hold talks with other parties.

READ MORE: New round of talks on Syria's constitution begins in Geneva

Loading...

Stalemate

After nearly 10 years of war, Syria is in the throes of a deep economic crisis amid a collapsing currency and skyrocketing inflation.

However, fighting has largely ceased and Assad has taken back control of most of the country thanks to strong Russian military backing.

Ahmad Kuzbari, the Syrian regime co-chair of the talks, said his delegation had put forward "positive" ideas, but the opposition co-chair, Hadi al Bahra, accused the Assad delegation of failing to engage in drafting the new charter.

An opposition member of the committee, Bassma Kodmani, said that anti-Assad delegates hoped the new US administration of President Joe Biden would quickly get involved in the process in coming weeks "so we keep this Constitutional Committee alive."

"Because it's the only track of the political process that is alive, but it is in intensive care, to be honest," she told Reuters.

The administration of Biden's predecessor, Donald Trump, slapped new sanctions on Syria last month in an effort to cut off funds for Assad's regime and encourage it to pursue peace through UN-led negotiations. 

READ MORE: How Syria has been a lesson for international law and humanitarian work

Loading...
Route 6