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15 Dec, 2024 21:54

France to dispatch diplomatic mission to Syria

The officials will arrive in Damascus a week after the fall of the Assad government
France to dispatch diplomatic mission to Syria

Paris will send a team of diplomats to Syria on Tuesday to evaluate the political and security situation following the collapse of the government of President Bashar Assad, acting French Foreign Minister Jean-Noel Barrot has said.

“The goal of the four diplomats who will be sent to Syria is to recover our assets there,” as well as establish contacts with new authorities and “assess the humanitarian needs of the population,” Barrot said, according to Le Figaro.

Barrot stressed that the French delegation will travel to Syria for the first time in 12 years. The diplomats will “verify whether the somewhat encouraging statements made by these new authorities, which called for calm and seem not to have been involved in violations, are actually being implemented on the ground,” he added.

The situation in the civil war-torn Syria was upended earlier this month, when a coalition of armed opposition forces led by the Islamist group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) forced Assad into exile in Russia. Mohammad al-Bashir, who led the HTS-run government in Idlib province, was appointed caretaker prime minister.

While many Western countries welcomed the fall of Assad, they also voiced concerns about HTS, given the group’s historic ties to al-Qaeda.

“We are not naive about the new authorities in Damascus. We are aware of the past of some Islamist groups,” Barrot said, adding that France will monitor the developments in Syria “with great vigilance.”

“On the political level, the de facto authorities must give way to a transitional authority that is representative of all faiths and communities in Syria and that can gradually move Syria towards a new constitution and ultimately towards elections,” the diplomat said.

France broke off ties with the Assad government at the onset of the Syrian war in 2012. Like the US and its other European allies, Paris backed “moderate” opposition groups, as well as the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF). In April 2018, together with the US and the UK, France conducted airstrikes on the territory controlled by Assad.

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