Full
Text: Communiqué of the Ceasefire Plan in Syria
By Reuters
February
12, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
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"Reuters"
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Meeting in
Munich on February 11 & 12, 2016, as the
International Syria Support Group (ISSG), the
Arab League, China, Egypt, the EU, France,
Germany, Iran, Iraq, Italy, Jordan, Lebanon, the
Organization of Islamic Cooperation, Oman,
Qatar, Russia, Saudi Arabia, Turkey, United Arab
Emirates, the United Kingdom, the United
Nations, and the United States decided that
humanitarian access will commence this week to
besieged areas, and an ISSG task force will
within one week elaborate modalities for a
nationwide cessation of hostilities.
The
ISSG members unanimously committed to
immediately facilitate the full implementation
of the UN Security Council Resolution 2254,
adopted unanimously December 18, 2015. The ISSG
reaffirmed their readiness to carry out all
commitments set forth in the resolution,
including to: ensure a Syrian-led and
Syrian-owned political transition based on the
Geneva Communiqué in its entirety; press for the
end of any indiscriminate use of weapons;
support and accelerate the agreement and
implementation of a nationwide ceasefire;
facilitate immediate humanitarian access to
besieged and hard-to-reach areas and the release
of any arbitrarily detained persons; and fight
terrorism.
Ensuring Humanitarian Access
In
order to accelerate the urgent delivery of
humanitarian aid, sustained delivery of
assistance shall begin this week by air to Deir
Ez Zour and simultaneously to Fouah, Kafrayah,
the besieged areas of Rural Damascus, Madaya,
Mouadhimiyeh, and Kafr Batna by land, and
continue as long as humanitarian needs persist.
Humanitarian access to these most urgent areas
will be a first step toward full, sustained, and
unimpeded access throughout the country.
The
members of the ISSG will use their influence
with all parties on the ground to work together,
in coordination with the United Nations, to
ensure that all parties allow immediate and
sustained humanitarian access to reach all
people in need, throughout Syria, particularly
in all besieged and hard-to-reach areas, as
called for in UNSCR 2254. To this end, the UN
will submit a plan to an ISSG humanitarian task
force, which shall convene on February 12 and
next week. This group will comprise the ISSG
co-chairs, relevant UN entities and members of
the ISSG with influence on the parties in a
position to ensure humanitarian access.
The
ISSG reaffirmed that humanitarian access should
not benefit any particular group over any other,
but shall be granted by all sides to all people
in need, in full compliance with UNSCR 2254 and
international humanitarian law. The ISSG asks
the UN to report weekly, on behalf of the task
force, on progress on the implementation of the
plan referenced above, so that in any cases
where access lags or approvals are lacking,
relevant ISSG members will use their influence
to press the requested party/parties to provide
that approval. There will be a process for
resolving any problems so that relief can flow
expeditiously. Any questions about access or
delivery will be resolved through the task
force.
All
ISSG members commit to immediately work together
with the Syrian parties to ensure no delay in
the granting of approval and completion of all
pending UN requests for access in accordance
with UNSCR 2254, paragraph 12.
ISSG
co-chairs and members will ensure that aid
convoys are used solely for humanitarian
purposes. International humanitarian
organizations, in particular the United Nations,
will play the central role, as they engage the
Syrian government, the opposition and local
populations, in arranging the monitoring and
sustained and uninterrupted distribution of aid.
Achieving a Nationwide Cessation of Hostilities
The
ISSG members agreed that a nationwide cessation
of hostilities must be urgently implemented, and
should apply to any party currently engaged in
military or paramilitary hostilities against any
other parties other than Daesh, Jabhat al-Nusra,
or other groups designated as terrorist
organizations by the United Nations Security
Council. The ISSG members commit to exercise
influence for an immediate and significant
reduction in violence leading to the nationwide
cessation of hostilities.
The
ISSG members decided to take immediate steps to
secure the full support of all parties to the
conflict for a cessation of hostilities, and in
furtherance of that have established an ISSG
ceasefire task force, under the auspices of the
UN, co-chaired by Russia and the United States,
and including political and military officials,
with the participation of ISSG members with
influence on the armed opposition groups or
forces fighting in support of the Syrian
government. The UN shall serve as the
secretariat of the ceasefire task force. The
cessation of hostilities will commence in one
week, after confirmation by the Syrian
government and opposition, following appropriate
consultations in Syria. During that week, the
ISSG task force will develop modalities for the
cessation of hostilities.
The
ISSG task force will, among other
responsibilities continue to: a) delineate the
territory held by Daesh, ANF and other groups
designated as terrorist organizations by the
United Nations Security Council; b) ensure
effective communications among all parties to
promote compliance and rapidly de-escalate
tensions; c) resolve allegations of
non-compliance; and d) refer persistent
non-compliant behavior by any of the parties to
ISSG Ministers, or those designated by the
Ministers, to determine appropriate action,
including the exclusion of such parties from the
arrangements for the cessation of hostilities
and the protection it affords them. Although a
cessation of hostilities can facilitate
humanitarian access, it cannot be a precondition
for such access anywhere in Syria.
The
ISSG decided that all members will undertake
their best efforts, in good faith, to sustain
the cessation of hostilities and delivery of
humanitarian assistance, and take measures to
stop any activities prohibited by United Nations
Security Council Resolutions 2170, 2178, 2199,
2249, 2253, and 2254. The ISSG again expressed
concern for the plight of refugees and
internally displaced persons and the imperative
of building conditions for their safe return in
accordance with the norms of international
humanitarian law and taking into account the
interests of host countries.
Advancing a Political Transition
The
members of the ISSG reaffirmed the imperative of
all sides engaging in negotiations under the
auspices of the United Nations as soon as
possible, in strict compliance with United
Nations Security Council 2254. They reaffirmed
that it is for the Syrian people to decide the
future of Syria. The members of the ISSG pledge
to do all they can to facilitate rapid progress
in these negotiations, including the reaching of
agreement within six months on a political
transition plan that establishes credible,
inclusive and non-sectarian governance and sets
a schedule and process for drafting a new
constitution, free and fair elections, pursuant
to the new constitution, to be held within 18
months and administered under supervision of the
United Nations, to the satisfaction of the
governance and to the highest international
standards of transparency and accountability,
with all Syrians, including members of the
diaspora, eligible to participate.
Full
implementation of these objectives will require
the ISSG co-chairs and members, the UN and
others, to work closely on political,
humanitarian, and military dimensions.