Arab News

Truce comes into force in Syria’s Daraa after weeks of f ighting

Opposition fighters that choose to remain in Daraa Al-Balad will have to surrender their firearms

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A Russian-brokered ceasefire came into force on Wednesday in Daraa province, the cradle of Syria’s uprising where regime forces have been battling holdout rebels, a war monitor and state media said.

The southern province of Daraa, held for years by opposition forces, was returned to government control in 2018 under a previous Moscow-backed ceasefire that had allowed rebels to stay in some areas.

But since late July armed groups have exchanged artillery fire with government forces and the regime has imposed a crippling siege on Daraa city’s southern district of Daraa Al-Balad.

On Wednesday, the warring parties appeared to reach a new truce, with Russia deploying military police in Daraa Al-Balad after weeks of mediating talks, said the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights.

The deployment came after dozens of rebels were bussed from the district to opposition-held territory in Syria’s north last week before intense fighting resumed at the weekend, hampering ceasefire efforts.

“Implementa­tion has started of the latest ceasefire agreement with the deployment of Russian military police inside Daraa Al-Balad,” said observator­y head Rami Abdul Rahman.

Under the terms of the deal, the Syrian government would erect three checkpoint­s inside Daraa

Al-Balad, having left the area for years under the control of former rebel fighters, said the observator­y.

Opposition fighters that choose to remain in Daraa Al-Balad would have to surrender their firearms, the Observator­y added, saying those who reject a deal will be

evacuated. The official SANA news agency on Wednesday published photos of crowds at so-called “reconcilia­tion centers” setup in Daraa Al-Balad.

“Armed fighters in Daraa Al-Balad started handing over their weapons and settling their status at reconcilia­tion centers,” it said.

The UN humanitari­an agency OCHA said last week that 38,600 people — more than half of them children — had fled Daraa Al-Balad and been registered in and around the city.

The UN and aid groups have also warned of dire humanitari­an circumstan­ces inside the district, where a regime siege had threatened supplies of food and medicine.

Opposition activist Omar Al-Hariri said the new truce in Daraa Al-Balad suggested a regime push to end rebel influence over several parts of the province where the state has yet to fully deploy.

The agreement “cancels the exceptiona­l status that Daraa gained three years ago,” by allowing

rebels to keep their weapons and remain in control of several areas, including Daraa Al-Balad, he said.

“The Syrian regime is now expected to aim at opposition hubs in Daraa’s western countrysid­e with the goal of securing the same results,” the activist added.

Daraa, which borders Jordan and is close to the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights, is widely seen as the cradle of the 2011 uprising in Syria, which sparked a decade-long civil war that has killed almost half a million people.

 ?? AFP ?? A Russian soldier patrols the district of Daraa Al-Balad in Syria’s southern province of Daraa on Wednesday. Nearly half of the population of the rebel-held town have fled heavy shelling and ground battles and the UN has warned that remaining civilians are cut off with dwindling supplies.
AFP A Russian soldier patrols the district of Daraa Al-Balad in Syria’s southern province of Daraa on Wednesday. Nearly half of the population of the rebel-held town have fled heavy shelling and ground battles and the UN has warned that remaining civilians are cut off with dwindling supplies.

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