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  • 25
    Oct
    2012
    6:56pm, EDT

    Syrian military agrees to Eid cease-fire; residents report shelling

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    /

    A look back at the violence that has overtaken the country

    Launch slideshow

    By NBC News staff and wire services

    Damascus residents reported artillery barrages by Syrian troops on Thursday, hours before the scheduled start of a cease-fire to mark the Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, according to Reuters.


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    Residents said the shelling by troops stationed on a mountain overlooking the Syrian capital targeted Hajar al-Aswad, a poor neighborhood inhabited by refugees from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights. There were no immediate reports of casualties.

    "Consecutive artillery volleys from Qasioun shook my home," said Omar, an engineer who lives in al-Muhajereen district on a foothill of the mountain.

    A Free Syrian Army commander had earlier given qualified backing to the truce, proposed by U.N.-Arab League envoy Lakhdar Brahimi, but he demanded that President Bashar al-Assad free detainees. An Islamist group said it was not committed to the truce, due to start on Friday, but may halt operations if the army did.

    Brahimi proposed the temporary truce to stem, however briefly, the bloodshed in a conflict that began as popular protests in March last year and has escalated into a civil war that activists say has killed more than 32,000 people.

    Syria agrees to cease-fire during Eid holiday, says mediator

    The fighting pits mainly Sunni Muslim rebels against Assad, from the Alawite faith which is linked to Shiite Islam, and threatens to draw in regional Sunni Muslim and Shiite powers and engulf the whole Middle East, Brahimi has warned.

    "On the occasion of the blessed Eid al-Adha, the general command of the army and armed forces announces a halt to military operations on the territory of the Syrian Arab Republic, from Friday morning ... until Monday," an army statement read on state television said.


    It reserved the right to respond if "the armed terrorist groups open fire on civilians and government forces, attack public and private properties, or use car bombs and explosives."

    It would also respond to any reinforcement or re-supplying of rebel units, or smuggling of fighters from neighboring countries "in violation of their international commitments to combat terrorism."

    Qassem Saadeddine, head of the military council in Homs province and spokesman for the FSA joint command, said his fighters were committed to the truce but demanded the release of opposition prisoners on Friday.

    Syrian opposition skeptical of 'feeble' ceasefire plan

    Abu Moaz, spokesman for Ansar al-Islam, said the Islamist group doubted Assad's forces would observe the truce, though it might suspend operations if they did.

    The Syrian Foreign Ministry has yet to announce that a cease-fire between government forces and rebels has been finalized. NBC's Duncan Golestani reports.

    "We do not care about this truce. We are cautious. If the tanks are still there and the checkpoints are still there then what is the truce?" he said of the organization, which includes several brigades fighting in the capital and Damascus province.

    Brahimi's predecessor, former U.N. chief Kofi Annan, declared a cease-fire in Syria on April 12, but it soon became a dead letter, along with the rest of his six-point peace plan.

    Report: At least 20 killed in Aleppo as rebels battle Syria army

    Violence has intensified since then, with daily death tolls compiled by opposition monitoring groups often exceeding 200.

    The U.S. State Department said it hopes the opposition forces and the government in Syria will put down their weapons and abide by the call for a cease-fire.

    "What we are hoping and expecting is that they will not just talk the talk of cease-fire, but that they will walk the walk, beginning with the regime and we will be watching very closely," spokeswoman Victoria Nuland said.  

    Nuland called any day in Syria without violence progress and expressed hope that if the cease-fire is in place, there may be "space for more work to be done on a transition."

    But Nuland also expressed skepticism, saying: "The Syrian regime in particular is good at making promises and less good at following through."

    China urged all sides to respect a cease-fire, an idea also backed by Syria's main regional ally Iran.

    Aid window
    U.N. aid agencies have geared up to take advantage of any window of opportunity provided by a cease-fire to go to areas that have been difficult to reach due to fighting, a U.N. official in Geneva said.

    "UN agencies have been preparing rapidly to scale up especially in areas that have been difficult to reach due to active conflict and which may become accessible as a result of these developments," he told Reuters.

    The U.N. refugee agency UNHCR said that it had prepared emergency kits for distribution for up to 13,000 families - an estimated 65,000 people - in previously inaccessible areas including Homs and the northeastern city of Hassaka.

    "We and our partners want to be in a position to move quickly if security allows over the next few days," UNHCR Syria Representative Tarik Kurdi in Damascus said in a statement.

    The U.N. World Food Programme has identified 90,000 people in 21 hot spots from Aleppo to Homs and Latakia in need food parcels and will try to reach them through local agencies, the U.N. official said.

    Ban Ki-moon, the U.N. secretary-general, welcomed the planned cease-fire, according to Al Jazeera.

    "We would simply fervently hope that the guns do fall silent, that there is a suspension in the violence so that humanitarian workers can help those who are most in need," Ban's spokesman Martin Nesirky told reporters, according to Al Jazeera.

    "The world is now watching," he added.

    Reuters and NBC's Catherine Chomiak contributed to this report.

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    10 comments

    But of course. You see Assad and the Syrian military can technically say they are observing a cease fire, since it is not the Syrian military, but Iranian Revolutionary Guard personnel posing as civilians who are using the artillery! Technically, Asswad is right, but the world sees the truth. Ahmadi …

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    Explore related topics: un, syria, united-nations, eid, assad, featured, ceasefire
  • 24
    Oct
    2012
    6:35am, EDT

    Syria agrees to cease-fire during Eid holiday, says mediator

    The Syrian Foreign Ministry has yet to announce that a cease-fire between government forces and rebels has been finalized. NBC's Duncan Golestani reports.

    By NBC News staff and wire reports

    Updated at 9:05 a.m. ET: Syria has agreed to a cease-fire during the short Muslim holiday of Eid al-Adha, which begins Friday, international mediator Lakhdar Brahimi said Wednesday at a Cairo news conference.

    Brahimi, appointed by the United Nations and Arab League, said some Syrian opposition groups he had been in contact with had also agreed to a truce in principle.


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    Brahimi did not elaborate on how such a truce would be monitored. Reporting from Syria is difficult and claims made by either side are almost impossible to verify.

    Report: At least 20 dead in Aleppo as rebels battle Syria army

    Eid al-Adha — the feast of the sacrifice — starts on Oct. 26 in the 2012 Gregorian calendar and lasts up to four days.

    "After the visit I made to Damascus, there is agreement from the Syrian government for a cease-fire during the Eid,'' Brahimi told a news conference at the Cairo-based League.


    He did not give a precise time period for the cease-fire but said Damascus would announce its agreement on Wednesday or Thursday. Syria's foreign ministry said it was still studying the truce proposal.

    Top 10 foreign policy issues facing a new president

    President Bashar Assad is fighting an insurgency that grew out of street protests 19 months ago and has escalated into a civil war in which 30,000 people have been killed.

    His overstretched army has lost swathes of territory and relies on air power to keep rebels at bay.

    Fabio Bucciarelli / AFP - Getty Images

    An elderly Syrian woman crosses a street next to a long black cloth used to separate the area from Syrian government forces' snipers fire, in the Bab el-Adid district in Aleppo, on Tuesday.

    Conditions?
    It was also not immediately clear what conditions all parties would have to impose to make the cease-fire a success. Rebel forces do not speak with one voice and already one rebel commander has said he has conditions that must be met.

    Nevertheless, Brahimi said there was broad agreement on the truce. 

    Slideshow: Syria uprising

    Fabio Bucciarelli / AFP - Getty Images

    A look back at the violence that has overtaken the country

    Launch slideshow

    "Other factions in Syria that we were able to contact, heads of fighting groups, most of them also agree on the principle of the ceasefire,'' he said.

    "If this humble initiative succeeds, we hope that we can build on it in order to discuss a longer and more effective cease-fire and this has to be part of a comprehensive political process,'' Brahimi said.

    The Associated Press and Reuters contributed to this report.

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    71 comments

    The stupid muslims won't be able to keep a truce. They'd kill their own mother if she looked at you the wrong way. Who cares any way. Let them keep killing each other for a change. It's refreshing. Even if one side wins the war, there will be no change globally.

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    Explore related topics: middle-east, syria, eid, truce, cairo, featured, ceasefire, commentid-syria
  • 12
    Apr
    2012
    8:10am, EDT

    Guns silent in Syria, but truce terms not fully met says Annan

    The first day of the United Nations brokered ceasefire in Syria has held. There was no bombardment by Syrian forces.  However, U.N. envoy Kofi Annan says by failing to withdraw its troops and heavy weapons, Syria has not fully complied with the peace plan. ITV's Neil Connery has been monitoring the ceasefire from neighboring Beirut.

    By Reuters

    Updated 1:40 p.m. ET: Syria has not fully complied with the terms of a peace plan, U.N.-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan told the Security Council on Thursday as a fragile cease-fire appeared to be holding.

    Annan urged the 15-nation body to demand the withdrawal of troops and heavy weapons from towns, according to an official who was present.

    Aside from a shooting at a checkpoint in Hama, Syrian troops held their fire in the hours after a U.N.-backed cease-fire took effect at dawn on Thursday, casting a silence over rebellious towns they had bombarded heavily in recent days.

    Annan told council members that Syria's fragile truce needs support and called for the swift deployment of a first wave of unarmed observers to monitor implementation of his six-point peace plan, to be followed by a second wave of observers later, diplomats told Reuters on condition of anonymity.

    A UN-brokered truce is keeping the guns silent in Syria - so far. ITN's Paul Davis reports.

    The former U.N. secretary-general said earlier in a statement that "Syria is experiencing a rare moment of calm on the ground," adding that it "must be sustained."

    "The Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, will be asking the Security Council for approval of the deployment of a U.N. Observer Mission as soon as possible," Annan said in a statement.

    "This will allow us to move quickly to launch a serious political dialogue that will address the concerns and aspirations of the Syrian people," he said.

    Annan has called for 200 to 250 unarmed U.N.-mandated observers to monitor the ceasefire. The Security Council is due to meet later on Thursday to discuss a draft resolution to approve the monitoring mission.

    "We hope that even tomorrow we might adopt a Security Council resolution on the deployment of that advance group of monitors," Russia's U.N. Ambassador Vitaly Churkin said.

    "The full-fledged mission will take some time to deploy ... If we are able to put 20 or 30 monitors (there) early next week, very good. If we are able to put more in the next few days that's even better," he said.

    Annan's six-point plan calls for a cease-fire by Syrian armed forces and rebels and dialogue between the government and opposition aimed at a "political transition" for the country.

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    63 comments

    "Partially observed"? You can't partially observe a cease-fire. That's like me saying I'm still partially observing my virginity even though I got laid last night.

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    Explore related topics: syria, kofi-annan, featured, ceasefire, shot-dead, syrian-national-council
  • 13
    Mar
    2012
    2:48pm, EDT

    Israel-Gaza truce mostly observed

    Suhaib Salem / REUTERS

    A Palestinian reacts as a gunman fires a weapon in the air during the funeral of Islamic Jihad militant Mohammed Daher in Gaza City on Tuesday.

    By msnbc.com staff and news services

    An Egyptian-brokered truce between Israel and militant groups in the Gaza Strip began to take hold on Tuesday after four days of violence in which 25 Palestinians were killed and 200 rockets were fired at Israel.

    The number of Palestinian rocket attacks dropped sharply after the ceasefire went into effect overnight, and no major towns in southern Israel were targeted. The Israeli military said six projectiles had hit, causing no casualties, and that there had been no Israeli air strikes in the Gaza Strip.

    But the Israeli army said the latest round of rockets fired from Gaza into Israel on Tuesday, could possibly endanger the ceasefire, according to Al Jazeera.


    The truce agreement followed appeals from world powers -- the United States, the United Nations, France, the European Union and the Arab League -- for both sides to exercise restraint.

    Gaza's Hamas Islamist leadership has kept out of the fighting and seemed eager to avoid a larger conflict with Israel.

    "We expect this ceasefire to continue but we cannot be sure so our forces... are ready to continue if it will end up being necessary," Israeli Defense Minister Ehud Barak, visiting southern Israel, told reporters.

    "It was quite a successful round," he said, citing the deaths of 20 militants among the 25 Palestinians killed in Israeli attacks and what he termed the "impressively effective" Iron Dome rocket interception system.

    The anti-missile batteries destroyed dozens of incoming rockets, but the barrages disrupted normal life for more than a million Israelis in the south, forcing schools to close and people to run for cover when sirens sounded.

    "If Israel is committed to the agreement, we also will be committed to it," said Khaled al-Batsh, a senior leader of Islamic Jihad which, along with the Popular Resistance Committees, was most active in the fighting.

    Amos Gilad, a senior Israeli defense official, said Israel would feel free to take "pre-emptive action" if Israeli lives were in danger. But, he told Army Radio, if "there is quiet on their part, there will be quiet on our part".

    Rockets fired
    The worst flare-up of violence along the restive frontier in months began on Friday after Israel killed a senior militant it accused of plotting to attack Israel from Egyptian territory. Israel said Gaza militants had fired about 200 rockets at its southern towns and cities from Gaza since then.

    Eight Israelis were injured by the rockets. At least 80 Palestinians, mostly civilians, were wounded in Israeli attacks.

    But while Israel was keen to bar rocket fire, there seemed to be little public enthusiasm for waging a longer military campaign reminiscent of a 2008-2009 offensive in which 1,400 Palestinians and 13 Israelis were killed.

    Gaza, home to 1.7 million people, was under Israeli occupation from 1967 until 2005 and remains under blockade.

    Hamas has controlled Gaza since seizing it from West Bank-based Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas in 2007. It has shunned the stalled peace process supervised by international powers and refuses to recognize Israel.

    Violent flare-ups have been frequent between Israel and Gaza's militant factions in the past few years, in most cases lasting no longer than a week.

    The last conflagration of this intensity was in August after a cross-border attack launched from Egypt killed eight people in Israel and Israel struck back killing 15 Gaza gunmen.

    Reuters contributed to this report.

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    59 comments

    Militant, from Latin meaning soldier or warrior.

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