The Day

Push for Syria cease-fire continues

- By ZEINA KARAM and MATHEW LEE

Beirut — Syria’s military extended its own, unilateral cease-fire around Damascus for another 48 hours on Monday amid an intense diplomatic push by the United States and Russia to restore a partial truce for the entire country — one that would include war-battered Aleppo, Syria’s largest city.

American officials say one idea being considered by the U. S. side is a detailed map that would be drawn up with the Russians laying out “safe zones” where civilians and members of moderate opposition groups covered by the truce could find shelter from persistent government attacks.

It was not immediatel­y clear whether Russia would accept such a plan or if Moscow could persuade Syrian President Bashar Assad’s government to respect the prospectiv­e zones.

One U.S. official said “hard lines” would delineate specific areas and neighborho­ods. The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized to discuss the matter publicly.

U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry did not specifical­ly refer to such a pro- posal in his comments to reporters in Geneva, where he met Monday with the Saudi foreign minister and the U.N. envoy for Syria, Staffan de Mistura.

“There are several proposals that are now going back to key players to sign off. We are hopeful but we are not there yet,” Kerry said, adding he would telephone Russia’s Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov later Monday and that de Mistura was headed to Moscow today for talks.

Aleppo has remained on knife’s edge as rebels and government forces trade rockets and bombs across the northern city and its outskirts, according to activist monitoring groups. Fierce violence took the lives of more than 250 civilians over the previous nine days, according to opposition activists.

The violence eased somewhat on Sunday. Still, rebels on Monday lobbed rockets into government-held areas in the western part of the city while government helicopter­s dropped crude and unguided “barrel bombs” on opposition- held areas in Aleppo and surroundin­g villages, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights.

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