The Asian Age

Guns silent in wake of truce deadline

Bus blast kills soldier in Aleppo, Opposition says no Army pullback

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Syrian troops held their fire in the hours after a UN- backed ceasefire took effect at dawn on Thursday, casting a silence over rebellious towns they had bombarded heavily in recent days.

But the lull did little to convince Opposition activists and Western powers of President Bashar al- Assad’s good faith in observing a peace plan agreed with internatio­nal envoy Kofi Annan. In defiance of that deal, Syrian troops and tanks were still in position inside many towns, activists told Reuters.

A report on state media that a “terrorist” bombed blasted an Army bus and killed a senior officer in Aleppo after the truce began raised a possibilit­y troops will keep a pledge to hit back. State media also reported a bomb wounding officers near Idlib and a ruling party member shot dead in Deraa in the south.

The Syrian government bars access to most independen­t media. The exile Opposition called the ceasefire “only partially observed” due to the Army’s failure to leave the streets and its leader urged a renewal on Friday of peaceful protests, which have been subdued of late by fear. But he warned those who might take part that they could expect gov- ernment forces to open fire.

The interior ministry urged rebels to surrender, promising to free those who had not killed, and broadcast an appeal to the thousands who fled battered cities like Homs and Hama to return from the havens they found in Turkey, Lebanon and within Syria. But streets in troubled towns remained nervously empty. An exile Opposition spokeswoma­n said three people had been killed during the morning by security forces, and dozens more arrested. Speaking after the 6 am ( 0300 GMT) UN deadline passed, Abu Rami, an activist in Homs said: “It was a bloody night. There was heavy shelling on the city ... But now it is calm, and there is no shooting.” Assaults on restive neighbourh­oods had become more intense after Mr Assad accepted Mr Annan’s timetable.

Government spokesman Jihad Makdissi, speaking before the report of the bombing of the Army bus, said Damascus was “fully committed” to Mr Annan’s success and that there would be no breach of the ceasefire by the government if the rebels did not attack. At the UN, Mr Annan was to brief the deeply divided Security Council at 1400 GMT, though diplomats expect a full report from him only on Monday. Western powers, though hesitant to intervene militarily, are lobbying Russia, a key ally for Mr Assad, to drop its veto on other UN measures to pressure Syria into abandoning four decades of autocratic rule by his family. The crisis has pushed pressure waves out along faultlines that criss- cross West Asia, pitting Sunni Arabs against Shia Iran, and alarming Turkey.

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— AP ?? Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem Theofilos III ( right) uses flowers to sprinkle worshipper­s with water after the Washing of the Feet ceremony outside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, traditiona­lly believed to be the site of the crucifixio­n and...
— AFP — AP Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Jerusalem Theofilos III ( right) uses flowers to sprinkle worshipper­s with water after the Washing of the Feet ceremony outside the Church of the Holy Sepulchre, traditiona­lly believed to be the site of the crucifixio­n and...
 ??  ?? French President Nicolas Sarkozy ( right) smiles as he takes part in a video conference with US President Barack Obama ( on screen) at the Elysee Palace in Paris on Thursday.
French President Nicolas Sarkozy ( right) smiles as he takes part in a video conference with US President Barack Obama ( on screen) at the Elysee Palace in Paris on Thursday.

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