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Assad accuses France of backing 'terrorism'

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad launched a scathing attack on France on Monday, accusing it of backing "terrorism" and saying it has "no right to talk about peace" in the war-torn country.

 

News Desk (AFP)
Damascus
Tue, December 19, 2017

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Assad accuses France of backing 'terrorism' A handout picture released by the official Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) on Nov.21 shows members of the pro-Syrian government forces posing with portraits of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and his late father Hafez al-Assad while waving a national flag as they gather in a public square in the Syrian border town of Albu Kamal. Syria's army and loyalist militiamen Sunday ousted the Islamic State group from its last urban stronghold in the country as regime strikes claimed more lives in a rebel-held enclave near Damascus. (Handout/STR/SANA/AFP/File)

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yrian President Bashar al-Assad launched a scathing attack on France on Monday, accusing it of backing "terrorism" and saying it has "no right to talk about peace" in the war-torn country.

His comments came days after Paris accused the Damascus regime of obstructing the latest round of failed peace talks for Syria held in Geneva last week.

"France has been the standard bearer of support for terrorism in Syria since the early days of the conflict," said Assad of Paris's support for rebels who have been battling his regime since 2011.

"It is in no position to evaluate a peace conference," Assad told journalists in Damascus.

"Whoever backs terrorism has no right to talk about peace or to interfere in Syrian affairs," he said.

French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian stressed France's role from the early days of the international coalition against the Islamic State.

"Mr Bashar al-Assad really doesn't seem to be in a position of power to affirm a political stance as long as he's dependent on Iran and Russia," Le Drian told reporters during a visit in Washington.

The Damascus regime has no "lessons" to give Paris, he added.

"It's the coalition that paved the way for victory."

The latest peace talks in Switzerland ended Thursday without progress.

On Friday, Paris denounced what it called the Assad government's "irresponsible strategy of obstruction", saying it had refused to engage in the negotiations.

On Sunday, French President Emmanuel Macron called Assad "an enemy of the Syrian people" who "will have to respond to his crimes before his people, before the international courts".

But Macron also insisted: "We have to speak to Assad and his representatives."

Assad's fate has been the stumbling block to progress in every round of UN-backed indirect negotiations in Geneva so far between his representatives and those of the Syrian opposition.

Damascus favors planned talks in Sochi in 2018 organized by Russia, the regime's main ally, over the Geneva process.

"In Geneva, the people we are negotiating with are not even representative of themselves," Assad said.

Sparked by the repression of peaceful demonstrations against Assad's regime, the conflict in Syria has become ever more complex with the involvement of foreign countries and jihadist groups.

More than 340,000 people have been killed since the conflict erupted in March 2011.

 

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