Syria's Assad sacks deputy PM

The Syrian Opposition says Bashar al-Assad's sacking of his deputy prime minister is a sign that the regime is "falling apart".

Defiant President Bashar al-Assad

(AAP)

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has sacked his deputy prime minister who had been absent without leave and held unauthorised meetings abroad.

The move follows media reports that Qadri Jamil had met with the US pointman for Syria, Ambassador Robert Ford, on Saturday in Geneva to discuss proposed peace talks.

The official SANA news agency said Jamil was sacked after an "absence without authorisation from his post" as well as "activities and meetings outside the country without authorisation from the government".

According to a political source in Syria, Jamil had proposed joining the opposition delegation to peace talks but that Ford had said he could not represent both sides at once.

Jamil himself told the Lebanon-based Arab satellite channel Al-Mayadeen that he planned to return to Damascus and defended his meetings abroad.

"Our meetings with international parties to halt the bloodbath in Syria are legitimate," he said.

Opposition National Coalition spokesman Louay Safi said the incident showed that "the regime is in the process of falling apart... Qadri Jamil perhaps felt the ship is sinking".

Jamil later founded his own party, the People's Will, which participated in peaceful pro-democracy demonstrations in 2011 that escalated into a rebellion after a crackdown by Assad.

The US and Russia have been struggling to convince Syria's warring parties to attend peace talks in Geneva next month aimed at ending the civil war, which has killed an estimated 115,000 people.

UN-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi was in Damascus on Tuesday as part of a regional tour to rally support for the talks following a rare US-Russian accord to dismantle Syria's chemical weapons.

The talks remain in doubt, however, with Syria's increasingly fractured rebels having yet to say whether they will attend.


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Source: AAP



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