The US special envoy to Syria comments on the “gas pipeline” explosion incident

The Syrian Constitutional Committee, which began its first session in nine months in Geneva on Monday as part of efforts to find a political solution to end Syria’s war, was swiftly put “on hold” after three members tested positive for COVID-19, the United Nations said.

Hours earlier, U.S. Syria envoy James Jeffrey told reporters that the government of Syrian President Bashar ِAl-Assad had agreed “under some Russian pressure” to take part in the week-long talks.

The session, organised by U.N. Special Envoy Geir Pedersen, is aimed at making make progress in drafting a new Syrian charter to pave the way for U.N.-sponsored elections, in line with a stalled 2015 U.N. Security Council resolution.

The office of U.N. Special Envoy for Syria Geir Pedersen did not identify which three of the 45 members of the so-called small body of the Constitutional Committee were infected. One third is nominated by the Syrian government, one third by the opposition, and one third by civil society.

Jeffrey said that the latest U.S. sanctions, under the Caesar Act passed by Congress, were having a “serious political and psychological impact” on Assad and his inner circle.

“So we are going after them in any way we can and after their international holdings, any way that they or their banks touch dollars, they are in trouble,” he said.

But Jeffrey also said, referring to a province in rebel-held northwestern Syria: “I have seen no indication that the Assad regime has given up its dream of a military victory beginning with Idlib.”

Source : Reuters