New Kurdish, Damascus talks failed, official tells Kurdpress

<p style="text-align: left;">The deputy speaker of Syria's Democratic Parliament stated the new Syrian Democratic Assembly, a political Kurdish majority council, talks with representatives of the central government in Damascus have led into no avail.

"In an interview with Kurdpress, Amina Omar, revealed that a new session of the parliament with the central government of Syria took place in past days at the presence of the Russian side and some discussions were made on the project of a democratic self-ruling system, Democratic Syrian Forces, and Kurdish-language issues but so far the talks have led to nowhere.

Amina Omar continued to say that the Syrian government still prefers military solutions to the politics and seeks more delay in the negotiations, adding that the statements of some Syrian officials show the extent of the effort they are making in reaching any agreement or with the Kurdish majority body.

The Syrian government is currently conducting military operations in Idlib and the western suburbs of Aleppo and is not taking the political negotiations with the self-ruling system so serious, according to the Kurdish official.

On February 9th, Ilham Ahmed, the co- chairwoman of the Syrian Democratic Assembly, announced the start of political Russia-brokered negotiations between the Syrian government and the Northern and Eastern Authority, and the possibility of forming a higher committee to manage the talks.

The Syrian Democratic Assembly held a meeting on Wednesday in the southeastern city of Tal Hamis, Qamishlu, attended by representatives of the central government, on the latest political and military developments in Syria.

The Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister, Faisal Meqdad, told Lebanon's Al-Mayadeen channel in an interview on February 14 that the Syrian government denies any idea of Kurdish self-managing system in the country.

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