UN: Syrian government agrees to
Eastern Ghouta truce
NEWS / SYRIA'S CIVIL WAR
FAST FACTS
Damascus shelling kills three before truce
agreed
Syrians frustrated with
failing Geneva peace
talks
Middle East Syria's Civil War
Staffan de Mistura, UN envoy to Syria, said that
Syria's government had agreed to a truce in
rebel-held Eastern Ghouta [Denis Balibouse/
Reuters]
Shelling killed at least three people in
Eastern Ghouta, a monitoring group
said on Tuesday, hours before the
United Nations announced that Syria's
government had agreed to a ceasefire in
the rebel-held area after days of intense
bombardment.
The UK-based Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights (SOHR) reported the
death toll a day after air raids in the
besieged district on the outskirts of
Syria's capital, Damascus, killed at least
19 people.
The report came as opposition delegates
gathered in Geneva for a new round of
UN-sponsored talks.
Government representatives are
expected to arrive in the Swiss city on
Wednesday. However, there is little
optimism for progress towards ending
the Syria's conflict, now in its seventh
year.
Speaking to reporters in Geneva,
Staffan de Mistura, the UN's envoy to
Syria, said the government of Bashar al-
Assad had agreed to a Russian plan for
a truce in the rebel-controlled enclave.
"Russia has
proposed and
the government
has accepted a
ceasefire in
Eastern Ghouta,"
he said, noting
that he learned
of the proposal
from a Russian ambassador during an
earlier meeting of envoys from the five
Security Council permanent
representatives: Britain, United States,
France, China and Russia.
"Now we need to see whether this
[ceasefire] takes place but it is not
coincidental that this was actually
proposed and agreed upon just the day
of the beginning of this session [in
Geneva]," added de Mistura.
Food and medicine shortages
reporting from
Geneva, said the opposition delegates
there are "likely to welcome" the
ceasefire in Eastern Ghouta.
"There really is, at the moment, only
one side that is involved in military
action there, and that is the Syrian
government with their onslaught, their
aerial bombardment that has been
going on for days and days now and
causing such agony for the people
there," he added.
Attacks on Eastern Ghouta over the past
two weeks have killed more than 100
people, according to SOHR, which
monitors developments in Syria's
conflict via a network of sources on the
ground.
Eastern Ghouta was hit even though it
was listed as a "de-escalation zone",
where military activity is prohibited
under an agreement endorsed by
Turkey, Russia, and Iran in separate
talks with Syrian government and
opposition delegates in Kazakhstan's
capital, Astana.
Rebels in Eastern Ghouta have managed
to keep Syrian military forces at bay
during years of war, however, a
government siege of the district has led
to a humanitarian crisis with severe
shortages of food and medicine.
After months of stalemate, the eighth
round of the Geneva talks is expected
to focus primarily on a new constitution
and elections, two of the four so-called
"baskets" of reforms laid out by the UN
for a political settlement to the Syria
crisis.
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