Syria peace talks end in deadlock

1981 0 258

Syria's regime and opposition have agreed on an agenda for a third round of peace talks in Geneva, despite disappointment at the little progress achieved as the second round came to an end.

No date was set for the negotiations to resume, and dispute overshadowed the potential talks as the two sides debated the order in which the agenda's four topics will be discussed: combating violence, transitional government, national institutions and national reconciliation.

UN mediator Lakhdar Brahimi proposed devoting the first day to a discussion of violence and "terrorism," and the second to the issue of a transitional governing body.

"I apologize to the Syrian people ... I apologize to them that in these two rounds we haven't helped them very much," Brahimi said.

He urged both sides to "reflect" and return ready to make progress in the anticipated third round.

"A third round without talking about transition would be a waste of time," opposition spokesman Louay Safi told reporters in Geneva, after the negotiations ended in failure.

Al Jazeera's James Bays, reporting from Geneva, said the regime delegation and opposition spoke for less than 30 minutes before talks ended on Saturday.

"It was a short, tense session, dominated by differences over how to tackle the issues of violence and political transition," opposition negotiator Ahmad Jakal told the Reuters news agency.

Mounting carnage

A Syrian activist group, meanwhile, said the death toll in Syria's three-year-old civil war has reached 140,000.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Saturday that the dead include civilians, opposition forces, members of the military, pro-government militiamen and foreign fighters.

The group bases its count on a network of informants on the ground.

The UN's human-rights office, however, has stopped updating the death toll from Syria's war, saying it can no longer verify the sources of information that led to its last count of at least 100,000 last summer.

PHOTO CAPTION

Smoke rising from the besieged Syrian city, Homs and nearby towns. (Jan. 27)

Al-Jazeera

Related Articles