Press TV- The Syrian opposition has rejected an initiative put forward by Russia during the latest negotiations in the Kazakh capital, Astana, to hold a congress, which would bring together Syrias warring sides in Sochi later this month.
Members of Syrian opposition High Negotiations Committee and the Turkey-based Syrian National Coalition (SNC) told Reuters on Wednesday that they do not approve of the plan, saying they would issue a joint statement later to express their opposition to the plan.
SNC spokesman Ahmad Ramadan said the plan seeks to circumvent the UN efforts to mediate Syrian peace talks in Geneva, adding, The Coalition will not participate in any negotiations with the regime outside Geneva or without UN sponsorship.
The Astana peace process has been underway since January with the mediation of Iran and Russia, the Syrian governments allies, and Turkey, which supports armed opposition groups.
The latest round of the talks came to an end on Tuesday, with the three guarantor states agreeing on the Russia-proposed congress.
Russia says the key task of the event is to pave the way for constitutional reforms.
Turkey against Kurdish presence
Despite Turkeys approval of the Syrian congress plan, a spokesman for Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Wednesday that the country opposes the invitation of the representatives of the Syrian Kurdish Peoples Protection Units (YPG) to the talks.
Ibrahim Kalins remarks came a day after a senior Kurdish official said that Russia had invited the Kurdish-led authorities in northern Syria to a proposed congress of Syrias rival parties in November.
Kalin noted that Turkish and Russian officials had discussed the issue, and that he had held meetings of his own to solve the problem on the spot.
More checkpoints for Idlib
The latest round of Astana talks focused on humanitarian issues in Syria as well as the situation in Idlib Province.
Elaborating on the agreements in the seventh round, Irans top negotiator at Astana talks Hossein Jaberi Ansari said on Tuesday that each of the three guarantor states had agreed to set up 12 checkpoints in Idlib, where a de-escalation zone has been formed.
Jaberi Ansari noted that the three guarantor states agreed on continuation of the fight against Daesh and al-Nusra Takfiri terrorists and their affiliates, settlement of the Syrian conflict through political channels and delivery of humanitarian aid to all the areas across Syria.