An opposition activist in northern Latakia told Reuters the area had been completely calm for three days.
Fighting erupted east of Damascus on overnight Tuesday despite a temporary truce announced by the Syrian army in that area, a war monitor said, and rebel group Jaish al-Islam said it had lost ground to the government there.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
also said seven people were killed in heavy rebel shelling of
government-held areas of Aleppo, which was not one of areas where
temporary truces were announced last week. An air strike south of Aleppo
meanwhile killed at least three people, it said.
Local
ceasefires were announced late last week in the Eastern Ghouta area
near Damascus and in northern areas of Latakia province. Washington and
Moscow said on Monday they were working hard to extend the truce to
Aleppo.
An opposition activist in northern Latakia told Reuters the area had been completely calm for three days.
Jaish
al-Islam said in a statement overnight that government forces had taken
ground around the town of al-Marj in Eastern Ghouta. The rebel group
said the loss had been made easier because of in-fighting with rival
rebel groups.
U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry
said on Monday he hoped for more clarity in the next day or so on
restoring a wider ceasefire, a reference to a Feb. 27 "cessation of
hostilities" agreement that has unravelled in recent weeks, particularly
in Aleppo.
Post a Comment