
Syria withdraws from Paris talks on integrating Kurds
The move came a day after the Kurdish administration, which controls swathes of the north and northeast, held a conference involving several Syrian minority communities, the first such event since Islamists overthrew longtime ruler Bashar al-Assad in December.
Participants included the head of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) Mazloum Abdi, who on March 10 signed a deal with President Ahmed al-Sharaa to integrate the Kurds ' civil and military institutions into the state.
The conference's final statement called for "a democratic constitution that... establishes a decentralised state", guaranteeing the participation of all components of Syrian society.
Damascus has previously rejected calls for decentralisation.
"This conference was a blow to current negotiating efforts, and based on this, (the government) will not participate in any meetings scheduled in Paris," state news agency SANA quoted an unidentified government official as saying.
The government "calls on international mediators to move all negotiations to Damascus, as this is the legitimate, national location for dialogue among Syrians", the official said.
Late last month, Syria, France and the United States said they agreed to convene talks in Paris "as soon as possible" on implementing the March 10 agreement.
Recent sectarian clashes in south Syria's Druze-majority Sweida province and massacres of the Alawite community on Syria's coast in March have deepened Kurdish concerns as progress on negotiations with Damascus has largely stalled.
The event also saw video addresses from an influential spiritual leader of Syria's Druze community in the country's south, Hikmat al-Hijri, and from prominent Alawite spiritual leader Ghazal Ghazal.
Damascus has strongly criticised Hijri after he called last month for international protection for the Druze and appealed to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for assistance during the sectarian clashes.
The government will not "sit at the negotiating table with any party that seeks to revive the era of the former regime under any cover", the official told SANA, condemning the hosting of "separatist figures involved in hostile acts".
"The government sees the conference as an attempt to internationalise Syrian affairs" and invite foreign interference, the official added.

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


France 24
an hour ago
- France 24
Netanyahu pushes for Palestinians' departure from Gaza as Egypt seeks 60-day truce
Israel 's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on Tuesday revived calls to "allow" Palestinians to leave the Gaza Strip, as the military prepares a broader offensive in the territory. Past calls to resettle Gazans outside of the war-battered territory, including from US President Donald Trump, have sparked concern among Palestinians and condemnation from the international community. Netanyahu defended his war policies in a rare interview with Israeli media, broadcast shortly after Egypt said Gaza mediators were leading a renewed push to secure a 60-day truce. The premier told Israeli broadcaster i24NEWS that "we are not pushing them out, but we are allowing them to leave". "Give them the opportunity to leave, first of all, combat zones, and generally to leave the territory, if they want," he said, citing refugee outflows during wars in Syria, Ukraine and Afghanistan. In the Gaza Strip, Israel for years has tightly controlled the borders and barred many from leaving. "We will allow this, first of all within Gaza during the fighting, and we will certainly allow them to leave Gaza as well," Netanyahu said. For Palestinians, any effort to push them force them off their land would recall the "Nakba", or catastrophe -- the mass displacement of Palestinians during Israel's creation in 1948. Netanyahu has endorsed Trump's suggestion earlier this year to expel Gaza's more than two million people to Egypt and Jordan, while far-right Israeli ministers have called for their "voluntary" departure. Cairo talks Israel's plans to expand its offensive into Gaza City come as diplomacy aimed at securing an elusive ceasefire and hostage release deal in the 22-month-old war has stalled for weeks, after the latest round of negotiations broke down in July. Egypt's Foreign Minister Badr Abdelatty announced that Cairo was "working very hard now in full cooperation with the Qataris and Americans", aiming for "a ceasefire for 60 days, with the release of some hostages and some Palestinian detainees, and the flow of humanitarian and medical assistance to Gaza without restrictions, without conditions". Two Palestinian sources told AFP that a senior Hamas delegation was due to meet Egyptian officials for talks on Wednesday. One of the Palestinian sources earlier told AFP that the mediators were working "to formulate a new comprehensive ceasefire agreement proposal" that would include the release of all remaining hostages in Gaza "in one batch". Netanyahu said in his interview he would oppose the staggered release of hostages, and instead would "want to return all of them as part of an end to the war -- but under our conditions". Mediation efforts led by Qatar, Egypt and the United States have failed to secure a breakthrough since a short-lived truce earlier this year. News of the potential truce talks came as Gaza's civil defence agency said Israel has intensified its air strikes on Gaza City in recent days, following the security cabinet's decision to expand the war there. Intensified strikes Netanyahu's government has not provided an exact timetable on when forces may enter the area, but civil defence spokesman Mahmud Bassal said on Tuesday that air raids had already begun increasing over the past three days. "The Israeli occupation is intensifying its bombardment" using "bombs, drones, and also highly explosive munitions that cause massive destruction", he said. Bassal said that Israeli strikes across the territory, including on Gaza City, killed at least 33 people on Tuesday. "The bombardment has been extremely intense for the past two days. With every strike, the ground shakes," said Majed al-Hosary, a resident of Gaza City's Zeitun neighbourhood. An Israeli air strike on Sunday killed five Al Jazeera employees and a freelance reporter outside a Gaza City hospital, with Israel accusing one of the slain correspondents of being a Hamas militant. Israel has faced mounting criticism over the war, which was triggered by Palestinian militant group Hamas's October 2023 attack. UN-backed experts have warned of widespread famine unfolding in the territory, where Israel has drastically curtailed the amount of humanitarian aid it allowed in. Netanyahu is under mounting domestic pressure to secure the release of the remaining hostages -- 49 people including 27 the Israeli military says are dead -- as well as over his plans to expand the war. Hamas's 2023 attack resulted in the deaths of 1,219 people, according to an AFP tally based on official figures. Israel's offensive has killed at least 61,599 Palestinians, according to the health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza, whose toll the United Nations considers reliable.


France 24
13 hours ago
- France 24
Israeli air strikes rock Gaza as Hamas chief heads to Cairo for ceasefire push
Israeli planes and tanks kept bombarding eastern areas of Gaza City overnight, killing at least 11 people, witnesses and medics said on Tuesday, with Hamas leader Khalil Al-Hayya due in Cairo for talks to revive a US-backed ceasefire plan. The latest round of indirect talks in Qatar ended in deadlock in late July with Israel and Palestinian militant group Hamas trading blame over the lack of progress on a US proposal for a 60-day truce and hostage release deal. Israel has since said it will launch a new offensive and seize control of Gaza City, which it captured shortly after the war's outbreak in October 2023 before pulling out. Militants regrouped and have waged largely guerrilla-style war since then. It is unclear how long a new Israeli military incursion into the sprawling city in north Gaza, now widely reduced to rubble, could last or how it would differ from the earlier operation. But Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu 's plan to expand military control over Gaza, expected to be launched in October, has increased a global outcry over the widespread devastation of the territory and a hunger crisis spreading among Gaza's largely homeless population of over two million. It has also stirred criticism in Israel, with the military chief of staff warning it could endanger surviving hostages and prove a death trap for Israeli soldiers. It has also raised fears of further displacement and hardship among the estimated one million Palestinians in the Gaza City region. Witnesses and medics said Israeli planes and tanks pounded eastern districts of Gaza City again overnight, killing seven people in two houses in the Zeitoun suburb and four in an apartment building in the city centre. In the south of the enclave, five people including a couple and their child were killed by an Israeli air strike on a house in the city of Khan Younis and four by a strike on a tent encampment in nearby, coastal Mawasi, medics said. The Israeli military said it was looking into the reports and that its forces take precautions to mitigate civilian harm. Separately, it said on Tuesday that its forces had killed dozens of militants in north Gaza over the past month and destroyed more tunnels used by militants in the area. More deaths from starvation, malnutrition Five more people, including two children, have died of starvation and malnutrition in Gaza in the past 24 hours, the territory's health ministry said. The new deaths raised the number of deaths from the same causes to 227, including 103 children, since the war started, it added. Israel disputes the malnutrition fatality figures reported by the health ministry in the Hamas-run enclave. The war began on October 7, 2023 when Hamas-led militants stormed over the border into southern Israel, killing 1,200 people and taking 251 hostages, according to Israeli figures, in the country's worst ever security lapse. Israel's ground and air war against the Islamist Hamas in Gaza since then has killed more than 61,000 Palestinians, left much of the enclave in ruins and wrought a humanitarian disaster with grave shortages of food, drinking water and safe shelter. Netanyahu, whose far-right ultranationalist coalition allies want an outright Israeli takeover and re-settlement of Gaza, has vowed the war will not end until Hamas is eradicated. A Palestinian official with knowledge of the ceasefire talks said Hamas was prepared to return to the negotiating table. However, the gaps between the sides appear to remain wide on key issues including the extent of any Israeli military withdrawal and demands for Hamas to disarm, which it has ruled out before a Palestinian state is established. An Arab diplomat said mediators Egypt and Qatar have not given up on reviving the negotiations and that Israel's decision to announce its new Gaza City offensive plan may not be a bluff but served to bring Hamas back to the negotiating table.


Mediapart
17 hours ago
- Mediapart
Stop Israel Now! European appeal against the genocide of the Palestinian people
A mass extermination has been taking place before our eyes in the Gaza Strip for nearly two years. Israel, under the will of Benjamin Netanyahu and a few fanatical far-right ministers, is preparing to commit new massacres by taking control of the entire Gaza Strip and emptying the city of Gaza of its entire civilian population. This decision confirms the genocidal intent of the Israeli government: after having massacred tens of thousands of Palestinians, used famine as a weapon of war, and turned humanitarian aid into an enterprise of terror, Israel is in the process of turning the Gaza Strip into an open-air concentration camp. Europe, which experienced in the 20th century mass destruction and extermination camps, bears a particular historical responsibility. As guarantor of the values of peace, law, and respect for peoples, it carried within it, at the moment of its political creation, an ethical imperative that was meant to have a universal scope: 'Never again'. Today, the worst is happening again at Europe's doorstep. What is it doing? Nothing, or so little! Through its shameful silence or mere protests, through its inaction or its support for Israel, the European Union — and each of its member states — becomes each day a little more complicit in crimes against humanity and genocide. This responsibility lies with the governments, but also with many elected representatives of the various national parliaments and the European Parliament itself. Therefore, as citizens of Europe, we demand that all elected officials who uphold the values of humanity and peace act now to put a definitive end to the genocidal enterprise of Netanyahu's government, to stop the persecution of the Palestinian people by Israel — whether in the Gaza Strip or in the West Bank — and to impose a ceasefire. This must lead to the withdrawal of the Israeli army from the Gaza Strip and the liberation of the Israeli hostages. We know it: only credible and strong measures will make Netanyahu's government back down. That is why we call on national and European parliamentarians to support the following actions and work towards their implementation: An embargo on all arms sales to Israel; Suspension of all scientific, military, and commercial partnerships with Israel; A ban on importing products originating from Israeli settlements; Creation of an international armed force to open humanitarian corridors and protect civilian populations; Sending sufficient humanitarian aid to end the famine situation organized by the Israeli government. The signatories of this appeal make it known to their elected representatives and national and European officials that their responsibility and mandate are at stake. It is their duty to stop Israel now! Tomorrow will be too late. Please share this text widely European countries. This appeal is free to publish, translate, and distribute, provided that the link to the petition is included. NB: CITIZEN ACTION. In addition to signing the petition, for maximum effectiveness, please take the time to email this appeal to your European parliamentarian. A 'letter' version of the appeal is provided below. Here is the procedure to follow, which will take you 5 minutes per email: Fill in the letter with your contact details, the correct date, and your signature. To find your MEP, you can use this search page (each MEP's email address can be found at the top of the page by clicking on the small envelope logo): Send the letter by email, copying it into the body of the message or attaching it as a PDF file with a few words of introduction. Letter © Pascal Maillard