Four-nation Syria summit urges preservation of Idlib ceasefire
The leaders of Turkey, Russia, France and Germany on Saturday (Oct 27)
called for a fragile ceasefire to be preserved in Syria's last major
rebel-held bastion of Idlib, following a major summit aimed at finding a
political solution to the country's devastating seven-year civil war.

In a joint statement adopted at the end of the talks in Istanbul, the
four nations "stressed the importance of a lasting ceasefire, while
underlining the necessity to continue to fight against terrorism".
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan read the statement, which hailed
"progress" following a deal last month between Syrian-regime supporter
Russia and rebel-backer Turkey to create a buffer zone around the
northwestern province of Idlib.
Erdogan met with Russian President Vladimir Putin, France's Emmanuel
Macron and German Chancellor Angela Merkel for extended talks on the
Syrian conflict, in which more than 360,000 people have been killed
since 2011.
The statement also called for a committee to be established to draft
Syria's post-war constitution before the end of the year, "paving the
way for free and fair elections" in the war-torn country.
A rival United Nations plan for a committee to write the constitution
ran aground this week, with UN special envoy Staffan de Mistura, who
attended the summit, saying Damascus rejected the UN having a role in
the selection process.
The four leaders in Istanbul vowed to work "together in order to create
conditions for peace and stability in Syria" and "encourage a political
solution and strengthen international consensus".
IDLIB VIOLENCE ESCALATES
The summit's statement also spoke of "the need to ensure humanitarian
organisations' rapid, safe and unhindered access throughout Syria and
immediate humanitarian assistance to reach all people in need."
The summit addressed the plight of the millions displaced by the
grinding conflict, saying that conditions needed to be created
"throughout the country for the safe and voluntary return of refugees".
The talks came after a week of escalating violence in Idlib culminated
in Syrian regime artillery fire killing seven civilians on Friday, the
highest death toll there since the fragile ceasefire began last month.
Following the joint press conference in Istanbul, Macron urged Russia to
pressure the regime of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to bring about a
"stable and lasting ceasefire in Idlib".
"We rely on Russia to exercise very clear pressure on the regime which depends on it for survival," he said.
However Putin warned that if "radicals" were to "launch armed
provocations from the Idlib zone, Russia reserves the right to give
active assistance to the Syrian government in liquidating this source of
terrorist threat".
'CHALLENGE IS TO END TWO WARS'
Merkel, meanwhile, said that the leaders "have the duty to prevent another humanitarian disaster".
"The challenge is to end two wars: The war against terror and the war of
the regime against large parts of its own population," she said.
"We must advance with the political process at the end of which there
must be free elections open to all Syrians - including those in the
diaspora."
Erdogan, a vocal opponent of Assad, said that Syrians "inside and outside" the country will decide the president's fate.
Aid groups have warned that a government military offensive in Idlib,
home to three million people, could spark one of the worst humanitarian
disasters of the seven-year war.
With an assault by government troops seeming imminent, Moscow and Ankara
agreed on Sep 17 to create a 15-20 kilometre-wide demilitarised zone
ringing Idlib as Turkey sought to avoid an attack leading to a further
influx of people across its border.
On Friday, Syria's UN envoy Bashar Jaafari maintained that the buffer
zone is temporary and that Idlib would eventually revert to government
control.
Turkey and Russia have held several talks with Iran on the Syrian
conflict in efforts that have often been greeted with suspicion in the
West, but Saturday's summit was the first to include the EU's two most
significant national leaders.
Syria's opposition, which has previously described Russia's military
intervention in 2015 as an occupation, on Friday said it welcomed
dialogue with Moscow.
However US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis told a security conference in
Bahrain that Russia was no replacement for the United States.
"Russia's presence in the region cannot replace the longstanding,
enduring, and transparent US commitment to the Middle East," Mattis
said.
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