Oman Daily Observer

Syria says ready to fight if rebels reject deal

Militants fail to quit buffer zone, throwing accord into doubt

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The accord was a last-ditch effort to stave off a regime onslaught on Idlib, the largest rebel stronghold left in war-ravaged Syria and home to around three million people

BEIRUT: Militants in Syria’s Idlib failed to meet a Monday deadline to leave a planned buffer zone ringing the country’s last rebel bastion, casting fresh doubt over a deal to avert bloodshed.

A Russian-turkish truce agreement reached nearly a month ago for the northweste­rn region gave “radical fighters” until October 15 to leave a proposed demilitari­sed area between government and opposition forces.

The accord was a last-ditch effort to stave off a regime onslaught on Idlib, the largest rebel stronghold left in warravaged Syria and home to around three million people.

But the target date for the withdrawal came and went without any hardliners leaving.

“We did not document the withdrawal of any fighters from the entire demilitari­sed zone,” Rami Abdel Rahman, the head of the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights war monitor, said on Monday morning.

Militants had until midnight Sunday to Monday to pull out, according to Abdel Rahman and two rebel commanders in Idlib. Syria’s government said it would take “time” to judge if the deal had failed.

“We have to wait for the Russian reaction. Russia is monitoring and following the situation,” Foreign Minister Walid Muallem told reporters in Damascus. He said he hoped Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan would still be able to “fulfil the agreement from his part.”

Hours before the cut-off time, Idlib’s militant heavyweigh­t Hayat Tahrir al Sham vowed to continue fighting. “We have not abandoned our choice of war and fighting towards implementi­ng our blessed revolution,” said HTS, an alliance led by Al Qaeda’s one-time Syria branch.

HTS and other, more extreme groups hold over two-thirds of the planned buffer area, and over half of the rest of Idlib.

Their withdrawal was seen as the real test of the accord reached on September 17 between rebel backer Ankara and Syrian supporter Moscow in the Russian resort town of Sochi.

The deal provides for a 15-20 kilometre buffer zone semi-circling opposition-held areas in Idlib and the neighbouri­ng provinces of Latakia, Hama, and Aleppo.

It set a first deadline of October 10 for all rebels and militants to pull heavy weapons from the zone, a task which Turkey, the Observator­y, and rebels said was done on time.

But late on Saturday, mortar rounds fired from the buffer hit government positions and killed two soldiers, the Observator­y said, indicating heavy arms may still be in the zone.

The apparent violation came just ahead of the deal’s second and more consequent­ial deadline: A full withdrawal of the zone by Monday, paving the way for Russia and Turkey to monitor the area.

HTS has yet to take a formal stance on the Sochi accord and its most recent statement made no mention of the deadline. But it and other groups appeared to have quietly pulled out their heavy arms in line with the first deadline on October 10.

That, observers said, could indicate that hope was not yet lost for the buffer. “Even if the agreement is not fully implemente­d today, it doesn’t mean that it’s not holding,” said Haid Haid, research fellow at the Internatio­nal Centre for the Study of Radicalisa­tion.

HTS would seek the “best possible scenario” for its own survival, but that may include “a partial withdrawal.”

Sam Heller, an Internatio­nal Crisis Group analyst, said the ambiguity in HTS’S statement “could be seen as a sort of implicit acceptance of the Sochi deal and its implementa­tion.”

 ?? — AFP ?? A shop owner sells broiled chicken in the town of Binnish, in Syria’s rebel-held northern Idlib province, on Monday.
— AFP A shop owner sells broiled chicken in the town of Binnish, in Syria’s rebel-held northern Idlib province, on Monday.

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