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28 Jan, 2017 14:51

Syrian opposition tells RT Astana meeting ‘important step,’ only Syrians should write constitution

Syrian opposition tells RT Astana meeting ‘important step,’ only Syrians should write constitution

Recent negotiations in Astana may create the basis for further political reconciliation, several members of the Syrian opposition told RT, while emphasizing that the constitution is a matter that should be exclusively decided by the people of Syria.

Despite major differences in the political platforms of the Syrian opposition members with whom RT spoke, most agreed that the Astana meeting had not been held in vain.
As an example of progress, Hassan Abdul Azim, the General Coordinator of the National Coordination Committee for the Forces of Democratic Change (NCC), a Syrian opposition group comprising over a dozen left-leaning political parties, pointed to an agreement reached with the military wing of the Free Syrian Army (FSA) that became a part of the ceasefire regime.

“The meeting in Astana is an attempt to support this agreement and to secure the ceasefire regime on the whole territory of Syria, excluding ISIS [Islamic State, formerly ISIL] and Al-Nusra Front,” Azim told RT, adding that the Astana forum had not replaced the Geneva conference, but rather prepared the ground for it.

Azim said that Russia has become more flexible and begun playing “a more important role” in the peace process. Commenting on the draft constitution put forward by Russia, he stressed that the new Syrian constitution should be solely authored by the Syrian people.

“[Russian foreign minister Sergey] Lavrov assured us that the submitted draft was only major ideas up for discussion and asked us to send our draft, while saying Russia would not impose anything on the Syrians,” Azim said.

Jihad Makdissi, an independent opposition politician from the Cairo Conference for the Syrian Opposition, who also served as Syria’s Foreign Ministry spokesman from 1998 to 2012, praised the Astana talks as “a step in the right direction.”

“The symbolic meaning of negotiations in Astana lies in the fact that dreams of the military toppling of regimes (sic) will be put to rest,” Makdissi said. Despite his opposition to the Syrian government, Makdissi believes the opposition and Damascus should stand on one side of the fence in eradicating the “cancerous tumor” of terrorism.

READ MORE: 'For average Syrians, all members of opposition are terrorists' - State Senator Richard Black

“We must recognize the fact that the Syrian political regime exists. Do we like it? Of course not, otherwise we would be living in Syria now,” Makdissi told RT, acknowledging that “that regime is still legitimate,” as it still has representative in the UN and missions in other countries.

Reflecting on Russia’s constitution proposal, Makdissi echoed Azim, describing the draft as “no more than a brainstorm for further discussion.”

“They [Russian delegation] asked us to look into these proposals, but did not force any document on us,” he said.

George Sabra, the former president of the National Coalition for Syrian Revolution and Opposition Forces, the main alliance of opposition forces in Syria, told RT that, while the group refused to participate in a meeting with Lavrov due to the lack of a detailed agenda, it did send a team of legal and technical experts to Astana to support the opposition’s delegation.

At the same time, Sabra flatly rejected the idea of a third party drawing up a constitution for the Syrians.

“We strongly condemn and oppose the draft of the Syrian constitution prepared by the Russian Federation and it is not acceptable for us that anyone else, except for the Syrians themselves, would make the country’s constitution,” he told RT.

Ibrahim Ibrahim, a spokesman for a left-wing Syrian Kurdish political party called the Democratic Union Party, which was not represented at the talks, blamed Turkey for his party’s absence.

“We must openly and honestly say why the representatives of the el-Riyadh group did not participate in the talks in Astana – it was because Turkey did not want it,” Ibrahim said, stressing that the main point is that Syrians should be able to decide their future and “it’s not that important who will propose a draft of the constitution.”

The Russian draft obtained by RT stipulates territorial integrity, separation of powers, and underlines the rights of minorities. It also states that the country’s leader can be stripped of power if a People’s Assembly finds him guilty of “treason” or any other “severe crime.”

READ MORE: Astana meeting on Syria ‘hopefully good basis for Geneva talks’ - Putin

Lavrov stressed on Friday that it would be inappropriate to compare the Iraqi constitution drawn up by Washington to the Syrian one.

“In Iraq, it was about invaders who wrote the constitution and imposed it on the Iraqi people as an uncompromising text,” he said, calling the Russian draft “an attempt to put together and find common ground in the approaches voiced by both representatives of the [Syrian] government and the opposition over the past few years.”

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