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Syrian opposition wary ahead of Russia talks

By AFP - Aug 13,2015 - Last updated at Aug 13,2015

A wounded Syrian boy sits on the floor next to men receiving treatment at a make-shift hospital in the rebel-held area of Douma, east of the capital Damascus, following reported air strikes by regime forces, on Wednesday (AFP photo)

MOSCOW — Syria's main opposition group on Thursday insisted President Bashar Assad must go as it rejected calls to join forces against Daesh militants ahead of a meeting with Russia's foreign minister. 

The head of Syria's National Coalition Khaled Khoja is in Moscow for talks with top diplomat Sergei Lavrov as part of a fresh push by Russia to find a way out of the four-year civil war that has cost some 240,000 lives. 

Moscow — one of Assad's few remaining backers — is pushing a plan for a broader grouping than the US-led coalition fighting the Daesh terror group, to include Syria's government and its allies. 

But Khoja — in Moscow for his first talks since February 2014 — ruled out cooperating with Assad and reiterated demands that the strongman must leave before any transitional government can be set up.

"Bashar Assad has no role in the future of Syria," Khoja said in an interview with the Interfax news agency translated into Russian. 

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel Al Jubeir — a key backer of the Syrian opposition — also rejected calls to work with Assad against Daesh after a meeting with Lavrov in Moscow Tuesday. 

The meeting in Moscow is part of a broader diplomatic flurry that saw Lavrov sit down with Jubeir and US Secretary of State John Kerry in Doha earlier this month. 

As part of the push, Lavrov is expected to meet the head of a newer grouping of opposition figures known as the Cairo Conference Committee on Friday. 

Russia's top Middle East envoy also met Wednesday in Moscow with the head of the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party Saleh Muslim to discuss the mooted anti-Daesh coalition and attempts to unite Syria's splintered opposition.

 

Syria's opposition and Western officials have hinted that Moscow's backing for Assad may be wavering but Moscow insists it remains firmly behind the Syrian leader. 

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