U.N. Envoy Says No New Syria Talks in Next Few Weeks

W460

The U.N.'s peace envoy for Syria said Thursday he has no plans to convene a new round of talks in the next two or three weeks as fighting flares on the ground.

Staffan de Mistura told a closed session of the Security Council that more progress was needed to strengthen a ceasefire and deliver humanitarian aid before talks can resume.

The envoy "briefed on his intention to start the next round of talks as soon as feasible but certainly not within the next two/three weeks," said a statement from his office.

Two weeks of U.N.-brokered talks between the Syrian government and opposition groups in Geneva ended on April 27 with no breakthrough.

There had been expectations that a new round would be called at the end of May, but no new date has been announced.

Diplomats said there was little chance that the opposition would take part in a new round of peace talks if violence was raging and no aid was reaching civilians.

The 20-nation group backing the Syrian peace process has said that it is up to De Mistura to decide on the appropriate time to resume the talks.

"Mister de Mistura reiterated the need to see progress on the ground –- particularly in reference to the cessation of hostilities and humanitarian access," said his office.

The envoy has repeatedly called on the United States and Russia to take action to shore up the ceasefire that has been in place since February 27.

There have been appeals to Russia, Syria's ally, and other players to put pressure on all warring factions to allow aid deliveries to reach civilians.

De Mistura earlier said that many Syrians will face starvation if the regime and rebel groups do not allow greater access to humanitarian convoys.

There "are plenty of civilians at the moment in danger of starvation," he told reporters in Geneva.

The peace talks are to reach a settlement to end the five-year war that has left 280,000 dead and driven millions from their homes.

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