Syria opposition urged to join talks
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The
Syrian opposition will not attend talks in Geneva seeking to resolve
the ongoing civil war unless several conditions are met, including the
removal of Bashar al-Assad, the president.

Jarba maintained that opposition leaders be considered traitors if
they agreed to the Geneva conference without first securing needed
"foundations" - necessary preconditions in light of what he called prior
"failures" by the international community to end the escalating
conflict.
"If we say yes to Geneva 2 conference, people will cry out for the
downfall of the conference," he said. "Our people have grown weary of
false promises and empty words. What right are you asking us to shoulder
this huge responsibility?"
The conditions include safe passage in beseiged areas, the release of
detained men, women and children, and setting a fixed timetable for all
the phases of negotiation.
British Foreign Minister William Hague reiterated the importance of
the Geneva conference in securing peace in Syria saying, "Assad would
play no role in a peaceful and democratic Syria".
The London talks were a preamble to persuade Syrian opposition leaders to attend the Geneva conference.
Hague stressed that efforts were being made to bring all sides to a negotiating table in Geneva but stopped short of saying Syria’s opposition had agreed to attend the talks.
He said the London meeting was aimed at persuading Syria's opposition
to have a "united position" for the conference scheduled for November
23 and said they had agreed on a number of steps.
US Secretary John Kerry echoed Hague's words while stressing that the
Syrian war will not be won on the battlefield but at the negotiating
table.
"I don’t know anybody including the Russians and others in the region
who are not part of the support group who believe there is a military
solution to this conflict. It is clear both sides will continue to
fight, and to fight, and to fight," he said.
Tuesday's talks were attended by the so-called London 11, the core
group of the Friends of Syria that consists of Britain, Egypt, France,
Germany, Italy, Jordan, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, the United Arab
Emirates and the United States, together with opposition leaders.
Source: Al Jazeera