France to host Syria summit, cautious on sanctions end

People in the Syrian capital appear to be resuming their normal life, French officials say. (AP PHOTO)

France says it will host an international meeting on Syria in January and that the lifting of sanctions and reconstruction aid will be conditional on clear political and security commitments by the transitional authority.

A team of French diplomats met an official from the Syrian transition team on Tuesday in Damascus and raised the flag over the French embassy there 12 years after cutting ties with Syria's Bashar al-Assad amid the country's civil war.

Acting Foreign Minister Jan-Noel Barrot told parliament that the diplomats had seen positive signals from the transitional authority and that in the capital, at least, Syrians appeared to be resuming their normal life without being impeded.

"We will not judge them by their words but by their actions, and over time," Barrot said.

Damascus airport
Planes have left the airport in Damascus as it reopened for internal Syrian flights.

A domestic flight took off from the airport in Damascus on Wednesday, marking the facility's operation for the first time since the overthrow of Assad more than a week ago.

A commercial plane operated by Syrian Air left the airport heading for Syria's northern city of Aleppo, according to an eyewitness.

Officials at the Damascus airport said its reopening is partial as the facility suffered vandalism and thefts following Assad's ouster.

The January meeting would be a follow-up to a meeting in Jordan last week that included representatives of Turkey, Arab countries, the European Union as well as the United States.

It was not immediately clear whether Syrians would attend or what the precise objective of the conference would be.

The US and its European allies have welcomed Assad's fall but are weighing whether they can work with the rebels who ousted him, including Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS), an Islamist group that is designated a terrorist organisation by the EU, US, Turkey and Australia among other countries.

Barrot said an inclusive transition would be vital and that international powers had many tools at their disposal to ease the situation, notably the lifting of international sanctions and aid reconstruction.

"But we are making this support conditional on clear commitments on the political and security front," he said.

Since cutting ties with Assad in 2012, France has backed a broadly secular exiled opposition and Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) in northeastern Syria, for which it has given military support in the past.

The SDF is the main ally in a US coalition against Islamic State militants in Syria.

It is spearheaded by the YPG militia, a group that NATO ally Turkey sees as an extension of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), whose militants have battled the Turkish state for 40 years.

France's ties with the SDF persist.

Barrot stressed that the political transition needed to ensure they were represented, especially given they had been at the forefront in the fight against the Islamic State group and were currently guarding thousands of hardened militants in prisons and camps.

"We know of Ankara's security concerns towards the PKK but we are convinced that it's possible to find an arrangement that satisfies the interests of everyone. We are working on it," Barrot said.

"This stabilisation also means including the SDF in the Syrian political process," he said, adding that French President Emmanuel Macron had made this point in talks with his Turkish counterpart Tayyip Erdogan on Wednesday.

with DPA

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