De Mistura: Syria peace talks to resume in August

De Mistura: Syria peace talks to resume in August
Staffan de Mistura United Nations Special Envoy for Syria

German Foreign Minister Steinmeier and UN Special Envoy Staffan de Mistura are attempting to reinvigorate Syria peace talks between the warring factions. A new round of talks could begin as early as August.

“The current situation in Syria is anything but satisfactory,” German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said in Berlin on Friday. He pointed to conditions in Aleppo and the fact that it has been impossible to restart the stalled Geneva peace talks.

“We will never attain a lasting ceasefire without a corresponding political process,” emphasized Steinmeier. He exchanged thoughts on the chances of doing so with Staffan de Mistura, the UN’s special envoy to Syria, whom he hosted at his office in the German capital.

“The next three weeks are going to be extremely important to give a chance for not only intra-Syrian talks, but also some possibility of reducing violence,” de Mistura told reporters at the German Foreign Office, adding he and UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon “are determined to actually look for a proper date in August” for new Syria talks.

De Mistura has found hope in the fact that the United States and Russia are apparently trying to come up with a common course of action to end the conflict. “We are eagerly waiting to see those steps become concrete and visible,” said de Mistura. Syria peace talks

Ahead of de Mistura’s comments, his spokeswoman in Geneva said there were already plans to hold a meeting of “fairly high-level” diplomats from the U.S., U.N. and Russia next week to discuss the Syria conflict.

Staffan de Mistura’s Berlin visit is one of a long series of meetings that have taken place over the last several days, in an attempt to make progress toward peace in Syria and the region. On Tuesday, Steinmeier conferred in London with his counterparts from Great Britain, Italy, France and the US, as well as with EU High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Federica Mogherini, about the stalled peace process.

“In the end there will be no solution if we cannot begin a process that brings part of the Syrian opposition back to Syria and lets share in governmental responsibility,” stressed Steinmeier from the UK capital.

According to the Foreign Office, Germany is one of the biggest international donors of humanitarian aid to war-torn Syria: So far, it has given more than 2 billion euros ($2.4 billion). Recently, another 100 million euros was pledged to the UN’s World Food Programme (WFP) for the supply of food to Syrian refugees in Lebanon. De Mistura praised Germany’s reputation and credibility in the region.

The WFP has also established airlift routes to closed-off areas within Syria. Some six million people are in desperate need of help in the country, and many of them are hard to reach. The Foreign Office in Berlin warned that despite such efforts the country is on the verge of a humanitarian catastrophe. Syria peace talks