The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Syrian rebel group won’t abandon front lines in province

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A Syrian rebel group said Sunday it would not pull back its fighters from front-line positions in the contested northweste­rn province of Idlib, where Russia and Turkey agreed to set up a demilitari­zed zone this month to avert an all-out offensive by Syrian government forces.

Failaq al-Sham, one of the main Turkey-backed factions in northern Syria, also said that one of the conditions of the Russia-Turkey deal - for rebel groups to withdraw heavy weapons from the zone - is meaningles­s since it has no such weapons there.

“We will leave in this buffer area all what is needed to repel any treason or aggression such as anti-armour weapons,” the group said.

The Turkey-Russia deal calls for the removal of all members of Syrian radical groups from the demilitari­zed zone, as well as the removal of tanks, armoured personnel carriers and rebel artillery weapons form the area.

The demilitari­zed zone is expected to be establishe­d by Oct. 15. It will cover a stretch of about 15-20 kilometres, about 9-12 miles, with troops from Russia and NATO-member Turkey conducting co-ordinated patrols in the zone.

But Failaq al-Sham also said it would not accept any Russian patrols in rebel-held areas once the agreement goes into effect.

The group’s statement is likely to complicate matters further for the Russia-Turkey deal. The statement was released hours after the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said Failaq alSham had begun removing some of its heavy weapons and evacuating some of its positions in the adjacent Aleppo province, which borders Idlib. On Saturday, another rebel-group, Jaysh al-Ezzah, also expressed reservatio­ns toward the deal that averted a government offensive on Idlib province, the last major stronghold of the Syrian opposition.

Jaysh al-Ezzah said demilitari­zed zones should not only be establishe­d in rebel areas but also in areas under government control. The group also said Turkey should ensure the Idlib deal does not end up like last year’s de-escalation zones in central and southern Syria, where rebelheld areas were later simply taken over by government forces.

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