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WAR REPORT
UN Syria envoy seeks to restart peace talks as regime targets IS
by Staff Writers
Geneva (AFP) Sept 22, 2015


Syrian regime air strikes kill 38 IS fighters: monitor
Beirut (AFP) Sept 22, 2015 - At least 38 Islamic State group fighters were killed in air strikes by the Damascus regime against three jihadist-held towns in central Syria, a monitoring group said on Tuesday.

Monday's strikes hit Palmyra and two other towns in Homs province, Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

The Syrian air force has been increasing its strikes against IS in recent days as it received reinforcements from Russia, he said.

"The number of raids is growing and the strikes are more precise after the Syrian air force received arms and more efficient planes from Moscow," said Abdel Rahman, whose group relies on broad network of civilian, military and medical sources inside Syria.

Experts close to the regime have told AFP that Russia has sent advisers to train Syrian troops in the new weapons, in particular short-range air defence systems and tanks.

US military officials told AFP on Monday that Russia had deployed 28 combat planes in Syria, in the latest move in Moscow's increasing military presence in the war-torn country.

Washington in recent weeks has expressed growing concern over Russia's moves to support Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and warned that military backing for his regime risks further hampering efforts at bringing peace.

Moscow has been on a diplomatic push to get the coalition of Western and regional powers fighting IS in Syria to join forces with Assad against the jihadists.

The UN's envoy on Syria, Staffan de Mistura, held meetings this week aimed at reviving peace talks, a statement said Tuesday, amid mounting pressure to end the four-year war.

After several attempts to find a political solution, De Mistura in July proposed a fresh approach whereby Syrians would take part in "thematic" working groups.

The envoy met with the heads of these groups over the last two days, seeking to "set the stage for a Syrian agreement to end the conflict," De Mistura's office said in a statement.

The group heads include Jan Egeland, a former top UN official and current chair of the Norwegian Refugee Council who will lead the safety and protection group, as well as Nicolas Michel, a Swiss national and former UN legal counsel, in charge of the group on political and legal affairs.

Also named was Volker Perthes, a German academic and Syria specialist who will focus on the military and counter-terrorism, with the fourth group headed by Sweden's Birgitta Holst Alani, who will lead the group on reconstructing the country.

De Mistura said he hopes these groups can lay the groundwork before representatives of the various factions in Syria join the talks.

But Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's regime has reportedly warned him the outcomes of the working groups cannot be binding.

The conflict among Assad's forces and various rebel groups including Islamist extremists has killed nearly a quarter of a million people since 2011 and forced more than four million to flee the country. Millions more have been displaced within Syria.

Hundreds of thousands of Syrian refugees have reached Greece this year, fuelling Europe's migrant crisis and leading to growing calls for a political solution to end the fighting.

"This is the defining humanitarian challenge of our times," De Mistura said. "The Syrians deserve that we move faster towards a political solution".


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