- NEW: "I think the government is willing to make it happen," Brahimi says of Homs exit
- NEW: "I'm afraid there isn't much to report," U.N. envoy says of Geneva talks
- Syria wants a list of men looking to leave Homs
- U.S. resumes nonlethal aid to unarmed Syrian opposition groups
Geneva, Switzerland (CNN) -- It's considered the capital of the Syrian uprising. It's been one of the most beleaguered cities in the nearly three-year conflict. The full death toll can't be known, and the scale of human suffering is hard to fathom amid the government's assault and rebel fighting in the city.
But Monday, some people in the old city of Homs had reason to hope that they might be able to flee soon.
At talks in Geneva, 1,800 miles (3,000 kilometers) away, the Syrian government and rebels were talking about the possibility of women and children being allowed to leave.
"I think the government is willing to make it happen, but it's not easy because there are snipers and (other problems)," U.N. envoy Lakhdar Brahimi said.
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