UN has ‘a million questions’ on Syria after Astana deal
GENEVA
The United Nations still has a “million questions” about a
Syria deal struck last week by Russia, Turkey and Iran, with aid convoys almost
totally stalled despite a reported reduction in the fighting, a U.N. aid
official said on May 11.
“Russia and Turkey and Iran explained to us today and
yesterday ... that they will work very openly, proactively, with United Nations
and humanitarian partners to implement this agreement,” U.N. Syria humanitarian
adviser Jan Egeland told reporters. “We
do have a million questions and concerns but I think we don’t have the luxury
that some have, of this distant cynicism, and saying it will fail. We need this
to succeed.”
The three-country deal on de-escalation zones was signed
last week in the Kazakh capital Astana, with a goal of resolving operational
issues, such as how to police the zones, within two weeks and of mapping them
out by June 4.
U.N. Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said he was convening
what he called “rather business-like, rather short” peace talks in Geneva from
May 16-19 to take advantage of the momentum. The political weight of the
signatories and the staggered timing of the deal gave it a strong chance of
working.
The alternative would be “another 10 Aleppos”, he said,
referring to Syria’s second city which fell to forces loyal to President Bashar
al-Assad in December after years of fighting.
A key aspect of the Astana deal was that it was an “interim”
arrangement to address urgent issues, not a permanent partition of Syria, he
said.
De Mistura said the Astana talks had also made rapid
progress on agreements covering prisoner releases and de-mining, and both were
almost complete.
Egeland said he could point to one concrete result from
Astana: the reported reduction in fighting and aerial attacks. But aid convoys
were only being allowed in at the rate of one per week, with no permission
letters coming from the government.
Although some recent local surrenders meant the number of
people who were hard to reach with aid had fallen by 10 percent to 4.5 million,
a further 625,000 were besieged - 80 percent of them by forces loyal to Assad,
he said.