Syria conflict: Opposition unveils transition plan Published duration 7 September 2016 Related Topics Syrian civil war

image copyright Reuters image caption Five years of war in Syria have left more than 250,000 people dead

The umbrella group representing Syria's political and armed opposition factions has set out a plan for a political transition to end five years of war.

The High Negotiations Committee (HNC) proposed holding six months of negotiations with President Bashar al-Assad, accompanied by a full ceasefire.

Mr Assad would then hand over power to a unity government that would run Syria for 18 months and organise elections.

Syria's deputy foreign minister later insisted Mr Assad would not step aside.

Faisal Mekdad told the BBC that demands that the country's elected leader be removed were "crazy".

Mr Assad has consistently refused to step down since the beginning of the war, which has left more than 250,000 people dead, and correspondents say the recent battlefield successes of his forces have only hardened that view.

media caption Jeremy Bowen spoke to Syrian Deputy Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad about the conflict

The HNC's "Vision for Syria" was unveiled in London by its general co-ordinator, Riyad Hijab. He said the plan envisaged three phases:

Six months of negotiations, using the 2012 Geneva Communique as a basis for discussions. Both sides would also commit to a temporary truce, lift sieges, allow full humanitarian access and release detainees A transitional period lasting a year and a half, starting with the establishment of a transitional governing body with full executive powers, as well as the departure of Mr Assad and other senior officials accused of committing "heinous crimes". A new constitution would be drafted Changes to the constitution would be agreed, the outcomes of a national dialogue implemented, and elections held under UN supervision

Analysis - Jeremy Bowen, BBC Middle East editor, Damascus

If the document on a transition in Syria had been produced by the political leaders of a victorious army at the gates of Damascus, it could be seen as an enlightened blueprint for the future.

But the regime in Damascus will dismiss it, because President Bashar al-Assad seems more secure in the capital than at any other time since the war started.

image copyright AP image caption President Bashar al-Assad's forces have enjoyed recent battlefield successes

In 2013, when the chemical attack on the city's rebel-held eastern suburbs seemed certain to provoke American air strikes the regime looked shaky and afraid. But the strikes never came, and since then the president and his men have strengthened their positions. Crucially, Russia has intervened directly on the battlefield. President Assad cannot win as things stand, but he cannot lose either.

The war gets more complicated every year. Regional superpowers, and the world's most powerful countries have intervened. Dozens of different, and sometimes overlapping rebel groups operate on the battlefields. All have their own agendas. It's a mini world war. No wonder diplomacy fails.

Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir said the plan would test whether Mr Assad's allies, Russia and Iran, were prepared to put the "necessary pressure" on him.

Mr Jubeir discussed the HNC's blueprint with other foreign ministers from the Friend of Syria group of countries that support the opposition.

UK Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson, who hosted the meeting, wrote in The Times that there "was still a chance that this vision can be made to work".

media caption Saudi Foreign Minister Adel al-Jubeir is not optimistic about Syrian peace plan

"If the Russians and Americans can together create a ceasefire, then the talks can restart in Geneva with the difference, perhaps, that all sides will by then have seen at least the scaffolding of a post-Assad Syria," he added.

Moscow and Washington, which have backed the opposing sides militarily, have so failed in recent days to reach an agreement on a new cessation of hostilities.

US officials are concerned by the deteriorating conditions in and around Syria's second city, Aleppo, where rebel-held eastern areas are once again under siege after government forces advanced over the weekend.

media caption Dozens in Aleppo were treated for breathing difficulties, as Jeremy Bowen reports

Activists said on Wednesday that one man had now died as a result of a suspected chlorine attack on the rebel-held Sukkari district the previous day.

In a separate development, the Syrian government began freeing dozens of opposition supporters imprisoned in Hama, Homs and Adra, outside Damascus.