Aljazeera - Foreign minister gives plan to Russia hours ahead of vote by opposition on whether to attend Geneva II peace talks.
Syria's foreign minister has said he has handed Russia plans for a ceasefire in Aleppo, and was ready to exchange lists with rebel forces on a possible prisoner swap.
In a news conference on Friday in Moscow, Walid al-Moualem said he had handed his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, details of the ceasefire, plus plans for a prisoner exchange and the opening of humanitarian corridors in Syria.
The offer came hours before the main opposition bloc, the Syrian National Coalition, was due to decide whether it would participate in peace talks scheduled by the UN next week in Geneva.
Washington and Moscow have been trying to negotiate confidence-building measures to force the two sides to the table in Geneva. The SNC has previously demanded the resignation of Assad before it commits to talks.
'Taking into the account the role of the Russian Federation in ending the bloodshed in Syria, as well as our trustworthy relations, I have handed Minister Lavrov today a plan of security measures in Aleppo,' Moualem said.
'In that regard I asked Minister Lavrov to use his contacts to implement this plan and to establish a specific time when all military actions in this area should be ceased.'
Mouallem said his government was committed to ending bloodshed in the country and fighting 'terrorism' - the regime term for rebels.
The meeting between Lavrov and Moualem takes place less than a week before the 'Geneva II' peace conference.
Dissent and disarray
The opposition coalition is due to vote on attendance later on Friday. One of its internal groups, the self-style government in exile Syrian National Council, said earlier this month that the Assad regime had not declared a strong commitment to the aims of the original Geneva talks, held last June, such as bringing in a transitional government and ending the war.
Syria's centrist internal opposition group, which rejects the armed rebellion against the Assad regime, said on Thursday that it would not attend the Swiss conference.
Khaled Dahowd, an executive member of the National Coordination Body (NCB), accused Russia and the US of rushing the conference to promote their own interests in the region, rather than those of the Syrian people.
Friday's Istanbul vote needs a two-thirds majority - 81 out of 120 delegates - to pass.
More than 120,000 people have been killed in the ongoing Syrian conflict, with hundreds of thousands more displaced because of the violence.
Fighting between al-Qaeda-linked fighters and more moderate opposition groups has added another layer of complexity to the nearly three-year conflict that rebels have been waging against the government.
Aljazeera - Foreign minister gives plan to Russia hours ahead of vote by opposition on whether to attend Geneva II peace talks.
Syria's foreign minister has said he has handed Russia plans for a ceasefire in Aleppo, and was ready to exchange lists with rebel forces on a possible prisoner swap.
In a news conference on Friday in Moscow, Walid al-Moualem said he had handed his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, details of the ceasefire, plus plans for a prisoner exchange and the opening of humanitarian corridors in Syria.
The offer came hours before the main opposition bloc, the Syrian National Coalition, was due to decide whether it would participate in peace talks scheduled by the UN next week in Geneva.
Washington and Moscow have been trying to negotiate confidence-building measures to force the two sides to the table in Geneva. The SNC has previously demanded the resignation of Assad before it commits to talks.
'Taking into the account the role of the Russian Federation in ending the bloodshed in Syria, as well as our trustworthy relations, I have handed Minister Lavrov today a plan of security measures in Aleppo,' Moualem said.
'In that regard I asked Minister Lavrov to use his contacts to implement this plan and to establish a specific time when all military actions in this area should be ceased.'
Mouallem said his government was committed to ending bloodshed in the country and fighting 'terrorism' - the regime term for rebels.
The meeting between Lavrov and Moualem takes place less than a week before the 'Geneva II' peace conference.
Dissent and disarray
The opposition coalition is due to vote on attendance later on Friday. One of its internal groups, the self-style government in exile Syrian National Council, said earlier this month that the Assad regime had not declared a strong commitment to the aims of the original Geneva talks, held last June, such as bringing in a transitional government and ending the war.
Syria's centrist internal opposition group, which rejects the armed rebellion against the Assad regime, said on Thursday that it would not attend the Swiss conference.
Khaled Dahowd, an executive member of the National Coordination Body (NCB), accused Russia and the US of rushing the conference to promote their own interests in the region, rather than those of the Syrian people.
Friday's Istanbul vote needs a two-thirds majority - 81 out of 120 delegates - to pass.
More than 120,000 people have been killed in the ongoing Syrian conflict, with hundreds of thousands more displaced because of the violence.
Fighting between al-Qaeda-linked fighters and more moderate opposition groups has added another layer of complexity to the nearly three-year conflict that rebels have been waging against the government.
Aljazeera - Foreign minister gives plan to Russia hours ahead of vote by opposition on whether to attend Geneva II peace talks.
Syria's foreign minister has said he has handed Russia plans for a ceasefire in Aleppo, and was ready to exchange lists with rebel forces on a possible prisoner swap.
In a news conference on Friday in Moscow, Walid al-Moualem said he had handed his Russian counterpart, Sergey Lavrov, details of the ceasefire, plus plans for a prisoner exchange and the opening of humanitarian corridors in Syria.
The offer came hours before the main opposition bloc, the Syrian National Coalition, was due to decide whether it would participate in peace talks scheduled by the UN next week in Geneva.
Washington and Moscow have been trying to negotiate confidence-building measures to force the two sides to the table in Geneva. The SNC has previously demanded the resignation of Assad before it commits to talks.
'Taking into the account the role of the Russian Federation in ending the bloodshed in Syria, as well as our trustworthy relations, I have handed Minister Lavrov today a plan of security measures in Aleppo,' Moualem said.
'In that regard I asked Minister Lavrov to use his contacts to implement this plan and to establish a specific time when all military actions in this area should be ceased.'
Mouallem said his government was committed to ending bloodshed in the country and fighting 'terrorism' - the regime term for rebels.
The meeting between Lavrov and Moualem takes place less than a week before the 'Geneva II' peace conference.
Dissent and disarray
The opposition coalition is due to vote on attendance later on Friday. One of its internal groups, the self-style government in exile Syrian National Council, said earlier this month that the Assad regime had not declared a strong commitment to the aims of the original Geneva talks, held last June, such as bringing in a transitional government and ending the war.
Syria's centrist internal opposition group, which rejects the armed rebellion against the Assad regime, said on Thursday that it would not attend the Swiss conference.
Khaled Dahowd, an executive member of the National Coordination Body (NCB), accused Russia and the US of rushing the conference to promote their own interests in the region, rather than those of the Syrian people.
Friday's Istanbul vote needs a two-thirds majority - 81 out of 120 delegates - to pass.
More than 120,000 people have been killed in the ongoing Syrian conflict, with hundreds of thousands more displaced because of the violence.
Fighting between al-Qaeda-linked fighters and more moderate opposition groups has added another layer of complexity to the nearly three-year conflict that rebels have been waging against the government.
comments