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Syria Declares Ceasefire Amid Clashes 01/09 06:10
ALEPPO, Syria (AP) -- Syria's Defense Ministry announced a ceasefire on
Friday after three days of clashes between government forces and Kurdish
fighters in the northern city of Aleppo that displaced tens of thousands of
people.
There was no immediate public response from the Kurdish-led Syrian
Democratic Forces, while a local Kurdish council rejected calls for the
evacuation of fighters.
The ministry statement said the ceasefire was effective at 3 a.m. in the
neighborhoods of Sheikh Maqsoud, Achrafieh and Bani Zaid and gave armed groups
six hours to leave the area.
It said departing militants would be allowed to carry their "personal light
weapons" and would be provided with an escort to the country's northeast, which
is controlled by the SDF.
Aleppo Governor Azzam al-Gharib toured the contested neighborhoods with an
escort of security forces overnight.
However, in the hours after the announcement, no fighters departed. Buses
lined up to evacuate militants remained empty hours after the deadline.
Associated Press journalists at the scene said a burst of machine-gun fire
targeted the location the buses had entered from, and an artillery shell landed
on the road, but calm quickly returned.
A local council representing the Sheikh Maqsoud and Achrafieh neighborhoods
issued a statement saying, "We will not accept the pressures imposed on us and
the calls for surrender."
"We do not trust the Damascus government to entrust our security to us, and
we have decided to remain in our neighborhoods and defend them," it said.
U.S. envoy to Syria Tom Barrack welcomed the ceasefire announcement in a
statement on X and extended "profound gratitude to all parties -- the Syrian
government, the Syrian Democratic Forces, local authorities, and community
leaders -- for the restraint and goodwill that made this vital pause possible."
Barrack said the U.S. was working with the parties to extend the ceasefire
beyond the six-hour deadline.
Some 142,000 people have been displaced by the fighting, which broke out
Tuesday with exchanges of shelling and drone strikes.
Each side has accused the other of starting the violence and of deliberately
targeting civilian neighborhoods and infrastructure, including ambulance crews
and hospitals.
Kurdish forces said at least 12 civilians were killed in the
Kurdish-majority neighborhoods, while government officials reported at least
nine civilians were killed in the surrounding government-controlled areas in
the fighting.
Dozens more on both sides have been wounded. It was not clear how many
fighters were killed on each side.
The clashes come amid an impasse in political negotiations between the
central state and the SDF.
The leadership in Damascus under interim President Ahmad al-Sharaa had
signed a deal in March last year with the SDF, which controls much of the
northeast, for it to merge with the Syrian army by the end of 2025. There have
been disagreements on how it would happen.
Some of the factions that make up the new Syrian army, formed after the fall
of former President Bashar Assad in a rebel offensive in December 2024, were
previously Turkey-backed insurgent groups that have a long history of clashing
with Kurdish forces.
The SDF has for years been the main U.S. partner in Syria in fighting
against the Islamic State group, but Turkey considers the SDF a terrorist
organization because of its association with the Kurdistan Workers' Party, or
PKK, which has waged a long-running insurgency in Turkey. A peace process is
now underway.
Despite the long-running U.S. support for the SDF, the Trump administration
in the U.S. has also developed close ties with al-Sharaa's government and has
pushed the Kurds to implement the March deal.
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