Fixing frontlines between Syrian government, opposition a demarcation: civil activist
QAMISHLI, Syria (North Press) – The reports about an agreement between Astana Trio (Russia, Iran and Turkey) to fix frontlines between the Syrian government and the opposition is a “demarcation,” Muhammad Hammoud, a civil activist, who lives in Damascus, told North Press.
On Tuesday, unconfirmed news were reported about an agreement during the Sochi meeting between the Astana Trio to fix the frontlines between the two parties of the conflict in the de-escalation zone.
“Division will take place doubtlessly even if it moves slowly, incidents that are taking place revealing that, and this means that the parties seek to fix their points first,” Hammoud added.
He believed that the second reason of the division is due to “the international community’s failure to impose the UN Resolution 2254 on the Syrian government and the opposition.”
The failure of the Constitutional Committee “worsened the political solution that will lead to the burning of both the Syrian state and community, according to Hammoud.
“The Russians are the ones to make decisions and not the Syrian government, as they are the key player, and the failure of the negotiations that Russia agreed on is a clear evidence, so division will be prepared slowly,” he stressed.
Hammoud pointed out that “Russia is taking the Assad’s share of the Syrian cake at the expense of the Syrians and their country.”