‘Regime of calm’ extended around Damascus: Syrian army
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Syrian army soldier monitoring the battle field.
The Syrian army says a “regime of calm” around the capital, Damascus, has been extended for another 48 hours.
According to the reports, the Syrian military made the announcement in a statement quoted by state television on Monday. It made no mention of a 72-hour lull in fighting in the north of coastal Latakia Province.
On Sunday, the Syrian Armed Forces Command said in a statement it had extended a 24-hour lull in fighting in the capital which had been announced on Friday. The regime of silence affected the capital and the Eastern Ghouta region on its outskirts.
Meanwhile, head of the Russian Center for reconciliation of the opposing sides in Syria, Lt. Gen. Sergei Kuralenko said Monday that talks were underway on declaring a “regime of calm” in Syria's Aleppo Province.
“Negotiations on introducing a 'regime of calm' in Aleppo Province continue,” he said, as quoted by Russia’s Interfax.
Syria’s offensive in Aleppo is based on a UN Security Council resolution which accepts Syria’s right to fighting terrorists.
Syria’s official SANA news agency said on Saturday that at least 25 people were killed in militant rocket attacks on the two residential neighborhoods of Neel and Hamadaniyeh.
The Takfiri Daesh and al-Nusra Front terrorist groups are excluded from a “cessation of the hostilities” agreement reached in late February as an attempt for facilitating the peace talks.
The truce, which is sponsored by the United States and Russia, is still officially in place in many parts of Syria despite surging violence in Aleppo, which has been a flashpoint over the past weeks.
SS