01/02/2014 10:35
Syria crisis: Geneva peace talks end in recriminations
The Syrian government and opposition have traded insults after a week-long peace conference in Geneva ended with no firm agreement, the BBC reported.
Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said the opposition were immature, while the opposition's Louay Safi said the regime had no desire to stop the bloodshed.
However, UN envoy Lakhdar Brahimi said he had seen some "common ground,” and scheduled more talks for 10 February.
The opposition has agreed to take part, but Mr Muallem refused to commit.
"We represent the concerns and interests of our people. If we find that [another meeting] is their demand, then we will come back," he told reporters.
He railed at the opposition, saying they had tried to "implode the conference" by insisting that the government hands power over.
Mr Safi said the opposition would not sit in talks "endlessly", and urged the government to "talk seriously about transferring power."
Opposition leader Ahmed Jarba said he and his colleagues had "stood up to the regime, a regime that only knows blood and death."
The two sides discussed humanitarian issues and possible ways to end the violence.
They made some agreements on local ceasefires to allow access for humanitarian workers.
UN aid chief Valerie Amos said the deals had allowed some aid to get through to a few thousand families.
But she said that, so far, an agreed ceasefire in the besieged city of Homs had not had any effect, and no aid has got through.