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Syria talks: Lavrov, Kerry in marathon negotiations as ‘real chance’ of agreement gets closer Syria talks: Lavrov, Kerry hold record marathon talks in Geneva as suspense builds
(about 3 hours later)
The US and Russian top diplomats have been in negotiations on Syrian peace process in Geneva for many hours in a row. Any exits from talks spark a ruction in the press pack while German FM said the two sides have a real chance to agree on a ceasefire this time. Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov has been locked in negotiations with his US counterpart John Kerry for more than 12 hours, beating the record in their bilateral marathon talks on Syria. With both diplomats still behind closed doors, no result has yet been reached.
The current Geneva negotiations between Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov and his US counterpart John Kerry are already lasting for more than eight hours with the two ministers having had several breaks. Sergey Lavrov told the journalists that the two top diplomats are thinking of ending this round of Geneva negotiations on Syrian crisis after waiting for more than five hours for Kerry to get approval on the deal from Washington. He said that the two might be continuing their discussions next week.
Any exits from the closed doors cause a stir among journalists who are eager to get the scoop. Though the record of 16 hour marathon negotiations in Minsk on the Ukraine crisis is far from being broken, some of the journalists fell asleep right in the lobby. "We are there, I don't know where our friends are, but I believe it's important for them to check with Washington,” Lavrov said, referring to the fact that Russia had approved a text of a deal and the US is still working on its position. Answering a reporter’s question, Lavrov also said that the Russian side approved the text of the deal on Syria, which is being negotiated at the meeting.
Earlier on Friday, German FM Walter Steinmeier said in Berlin that the two sides have a real chance to agree on a ceasefire during these talks, adding that there is already an “existing document concerning the truce” that lasts many days. He also lifted the veil by saying that the differences between Russia and the US were reduced to just two or three issues. "We're thinking of maybe calling it a day, maybe meeting next week," he said before he went back behind closed doors.
During one of the breaks, Kerry addressed the journalists and asked how they are “surviving” while Sergey Lavrov said that he, unfortunately, has no information to cheer them up during another break, RT’s Egor Piskunov reports from the scene. Staffan de Mistura, the UN Special Envoy for Syria, who was also present at the talks, said that the final results of the negotiations have not been achieved but he still hopes for an agreement.
The ongoing talks are surrounded by speculations and the atmosphere of uncertainty is prevailing in Geneva as nothing specific has still been said about the nature of the negotiations and neither Lavrov nor Kerry have made any official statements after more than eight hours of negotiations. In the meantime, the US State Department spokesman, John Kirby, told journalists that John Kerry still “continues to have discussions with his colleagues in Washington on Syria proposal he has been working on with Russians.”
Meanwhile, Steinmeier said that the US and Russian diplomats are working on a possible ceasefire in Syria that can last from seven to 10 days, the RT correspondent on the scene reports. Meanwhile, a source in the Russian delegation also said that the Washington’s position became the major reason for the negotiations to be dragged out. “Apparently, the coordination of negotiating positions got stuck in Washington’s vertical of executive power,” the source told Interfax.
The main goal of the ceasefire is reportedly to ensure that the humanitarian aid gets into the besieged areas of Syria, particularly to the city of Aleppo. The issue of separation of the moderate opposition forces from terrorist groups is reportedly still the major stumbling block in the ongoing negotiations, according to the RT correspondent on the scene. The ongoing talks are surrounded by speculations and the atmosphere of uncertainty is prevailing in Geneva as nothing specific has still been said about the nature of the negotiations and neither Lavrov nor Kerry have made any official statements after more than twelve hours of negotiations.
The two diplomats had at least 40 conversations ranging from phone calls to marathon talks this year alone. The longest negotiations they had in 2016 lasted 12 hours and took place in late August. Those talks allowed Russia and the US to reduce mutual levels of misunderstanding. At that time, the two countries also agreed to enhance their cooperation on Syria, particularly on the military level. The latest talks between Lavrov and Kerry continued for 11 hours. In the meantime, German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said that the US and Russian diplomats are working on a possible ceasefire in Syria that can last from seven to ten days, an RT correspondent at the scene reports.
The main goal of the ceasefire is reportedly to ensure that the humanitarian aid gets into the besieged areas of Syria, particularly to the city of Aleppo. The issue of separation of the moderate opposition forces from terrorist groups is reportedly still the major stumbling block in the ongoing negotiations, according to the RT correspondent.
Steinmeier stressed that the two sides have a real chance to agree on a ceasefire during these talks, adding that there is already an “existing document concerning the truce” that lasts many days. He also said that the differences between Russia and the US reduced to just two or three issues.
Meanwhile, earlier in the day some journalists got so tired of waiting and became so weary of uncertainty that they fell asleep.
The two diplomats had at least 40 conversations ranging from phone calls to marathon talks this year alone. The longest negotiations they had in 2016 lasted 12 hours and took place in late August. Those talks allowed Russia and the US to reduce mutual levels of misunderstanding. At that time, the two countries also agreed to enhance their cooperation on Syria, particularly on the military level.
The previous talks between Lavrov and Kerry continued for 11 hours.