The UN's Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura, who brought rival regime and opposition delegates symbolically together late yesterday, held separate meetings with them today to hammer out the format for the meetings.
But there appeared to be no discussion of substance, either with the UN and certainly not between the rival parties themselves.
"We discussed issues relating to the format of the talks exclusively," said Syrian regime delegation chief Bashar al-Jaafari after meeting de Mistura.
UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres said he was "encouraged that the Syrians...Sat together in the same room," even if it remains unclear whether the two sides will hold face-to-face negotiations.
During three previous rounds of talks in Geneva last year, the rivals never sat down at the same table, instead leaving de Mistura to shuttle between them.
Even as the new UN talks began, the death toll in a suicide bombing near the Syrian town of Al-Bab rose to 51, the latest atrocity in a six-year war which has killed more than 310,000 people.
In Al-Bab, most of the dead were Turkish-backed rebels, who had only just taken the stronghold town from IS militants.
There was no immediate claim for the attack but it bore all the hallmarks of IS, which had put up fierce resistance in Al-Bab for weeks.
The attack has no direct bearing on the UN talks, since the IS is not part of the latest ceasefire deal, but it illustrates the lack of any return to normality for war-ravaged Syria.
The ceasefire "is fragile but it is there, and we didn't have one for many months," he said late yesterday.
In his welcoming address, the veteran diplomat called on the war-torn nation's rival sides to meet their historic responsibility.
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