Syria ceasefire takes effect under US-Russia deal
ALEPPO: A ceasefire brokered by Russia and the United States took effect in Syria at sundown Monday, despite scepticism over how long the truce in the five-year conflict would hold.
The initial 48-hour truce came into force at 1600 GMT across Syria except in areas held by militants like the militant Islamic State (IS) group.
Syria's armed forces immediately announced a seven-day “freeze” on military operations, lasting to midnight next Sunday.
But opposition forces had yet to formally sign on and the deal's fragility, which was underscored just hours before sundown when President Bashar al-Assad vowed to retake the whole country from “terrorists”.
The agreement, announced Friday after marathon talks between Russia and the United States, has been billed as the best chance yet to halt the bloodshed in Syria's insurgency which has raged since March 2011.
As well as bringing a temporary end to the fighting, it aims to provide crucial aid to hundreds of thousands of desperate civilians.
AFP correspondents in Syria's devastated second city Aleppo, divided between a militant-held east and government-controlled west since mid-2012, said fighting appeared to have stopped as the ceasefire took effect.
A final rocket was fired from the east into government areas just five minutes before 7:00pm local time, while rebel neighbourhoods had not been hit by bombardments for about two hours, they said.
“I was checking the time all day, waiting for it to turn 7:00,” said Khaled al-Muraweh, a 38-year-old shopkeeper in the Furqan district of western Aleppo.
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“I hope the ceasefire holds so I can see my brother who lives in the opposition-held part of the city.”
'We aren't very hopeful'
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it was “quiet” on nearly all fronts across the country.
Thirteen civilians were killed in unidentified strikes in Idlib province Monday afternoon, the Observatory said.
Bombardment rocked the central town of Talbisseh all day, an activist there said, finally quieting down as the truce came into effect.
“For the past half hour, we haven't heard anything, but we aren't very hopeful... For Eid, I'm just planning on staying alive.”
Senior Russian military official Sergei Rudskoi said the “cessation of hostilities is being resumed across all the territory of Syria”.
But Russia would “continue to carry out strikes against terrorist targets”, he said.
Under the agreement, fighting will halt in areas not held by militants and aid deliveries to besieged areas will begin, with government and rebel forces ensuring unimpeded humanitarian access to Aleppo in particular.