Oman Daily Observer

Russia, Turkey to give more time for Idlib deal: UN

Putin says IS has seized 700 hostages including US and European nationals and executed some of them

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GENEVA: Russia and Turkey plan to give more time for the implementa­tion of their de-escalation deal in the Syrian province of Idlib, a “great relief ” for 3 million civilians in the area, UN humanitari­an adviser Jan Egeland told reporters on Thursday.

But there were still “a million unanswered questions” about how the deal would work, and what would happen if groups designated as terrorists refused to lay down their weapons.

Speaking after a regular Syria humanitari­an meeting in Geneva, Egeland said Syria’s ally Russia had confirmed that Damascus had scrapped a “very concerning” law allowing the expropriat­ion of land and property from refugees.

Idlib and adjacent areas are the last stronghold of rebels who rose up against President Bashar al Assad in 2011, and the UN has warned that a battle to restore Assad’s control over the zone could be the worst of the seven-year-old war.

Turkey and Russia’s deal set up a buffer zone running 15-20 km deep into rebel territory that originally had to be free of heavy weapons and militants by Monday.

“There will be more time for diplomacy,” Egeland said.

“I was heartened to hear both Russia and Turkey say they are optimistic, they can achieve much more through negotiatio­ns, and they are generally very positive on the implementa­tion of this deal which is giving a relief, a pause in fighting, to Idlib.”

Egeland said there were 12,000 humanitari­an workers in the area, and Idlib had now gone five weeks without an air raid, something he could not remember in the past three years.

In the east, however, fighting was raging around several villages inhabited by 15,000 people, including IS fighters and their families.

Meanwhile, Russian President Vladimir Putin said on Thursday that IS militants had seized nearly 700 hostages in part of Syria controlled by Us-backed forces and had executed some of them and promised to kill more.

Speaking in the Black Sea resort city of Sochi, Putin said the hostages included several US and European nationals, adding that IS was expanding its control in territory on the left bank of the River Euphrates controlled by US and Us-backed forces.

Putin did not specify what the militants’ demands were.

“They have issued ultimatums, specific demands and warned that if these ultimatums are not met they will execute 10 people every day. The day before yesterday they executed 10 people,” Putin told the Valdai discussion forum in Sochi. show no sign of a breakthrou­gh.

More than 360,000 people have died in Syria’s war, which began in March 2011 as an uprising against President Bashar al Assad but has morphed into a complex conflict with myriad armed groups, some of whom are foreign-backed.

“I presume I will be replaced by somebody better and that they will continue with the task force because the job is not even half done,” Egeland said.

He nonetheles­s hailed a few positive developmen­ts in Syria that had been discussed by countries at a taskforce meeting on Thursday, including the success so far of a Russian-turkish deal to create calm around Syria’s last rebel stronghold, Idlib. “It is a welcome calm,” he said. But overall, Egeland lamented that over the three years he has headed the humanitari­an taskforce for Syria, “there has been too many setbacks, we have failed more often than we have achieved what we wanted.” — AFP

Turkey and Russia’s deal set up a buffer zone running 1520 km deep into rebel territory that originally had to be free of heavy weapons and militants by Monday

 ?? — AFP ?? A member of the Raqa civil council’s local security forces checks the identifica­tion documents of a man riding a motorcycle at a checkpoint securing vehicles entering into the eastern Syrian city and former IS stronghold, on Wednesday.
— AFP A member of the Raqa civil council’s local security forces checks the identifica­tion documents of a man riding a motorcycle at a checkpoint securing vehicles entering into the eastern Syrian city and former IS stronghold, on Wednesday.
 ?? Jan Egeland ??
Jan Egeland

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