REUTERS-Clashes,
shelling and air raids in western Syria marred a Russian- and Turkish-backed
ceasefire that aims to end nearly six years of war and lead to peace
talks
between rebels and a government emboldened by recent battlefield success.
Russian
President Vladimir Putin, a key ally of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad,
announced the ceasefire on Thursday after forging the agreement with Turkey, a
longtime backer of the opposition.
The truce went
into force at midnight but monitors and rebels reported almost immediate
clashes, and violence appeared to escalate later on Friday as warplanes bombed
areas in the country's northwest, they said.
The ceasefire
is meant as a first step towards fresh peace talks, after several failed
international efforts this year to halt the conflict, which began as a peaceful
uprising and descended into civil war in 2011.
It has
resulted in more than 300,000 deaths, displaced more than 11 million people and
drawn in the military involvement of world and regional powers, including
Moscow and Ankara.
The agreement
brokered by Russia and Turkey, which said they will guarantee the truce, is the
first of three ceasefire deals this year not to involve the United States or
United Nations.
Moscow is keen
to push ahead with peace talks, hosted by its ally Kazakhstan. But the first
challenge will be maintaining the truce, which looked increasingly shaky on
Friday.
Syrian
government warplanes carried out nearly 20 raids against rebels in several
towns along the provincial boundary between Idlib and Hama, the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said. Clashes between rebel groups and government
forces took place overnight in the area, the Observatory and a rebel official
said.
Warplanes and
helicopters also struck northwest of Damascus in the rebel-held Wadi Barada valley,
where government troops and allied forces clashed with rebels, the
British-based Observatory reported.
A military
media unit run by Damascus's ally Hezbollah denied any Syrian government air
strikes on the area.
An official
from the Nour al-Din al-Zinki rebel group said government forces had also tried
to advance in southern Aleppo province.
There was no
immediate comment from the Syrian military on Friday's clashes.
A number of
rebel groups have signed the new agreement, Russia's Defence Ministry said on
Thursday. Several rebel officials acknowledged the deal, and a spokesman for
the Free Syrian Army (FSA), a loose alliance of insurgent groups, said it would
abide by the truce.
PREVIOUS
COLLAPSES
The previous
two Syria ceasefires, brokered by Washington and Moscow, took effect in
February and September but both collapsed within weeks as warring sides accused
each other of truce violations and fighting intensified.
Putin said the
parties were prepared to start peace talks intended to take place in Astana.
Syrian state media said late on Thursday those talks would take place
"soon".
The Syrian
government will be negotiating from a strong position after its army and their
allies, including Shi'ite militias supported by Iran, along with Russian air
power, routed rebels in their last major urban stronghold of Aleppo this month.
Moscow's air
campaign since September last year has turned the civil war in Assad's favour,
and the last rebels left Aleppo for areas that are still under rebel control to
the west of the city, including the province of Idlib.
In another
sign that the latest truce could be as challenging to maintain as its
predecessors, there was confusion over which rebel groups would be covered by
the ceasefire.
The Syrian
army said the agreement did not include the radical Islamist group Islamic
State, fighters affiliated to al Qaeda's former branch the Nusra Front, or any
factions linked to those jihadist groups.
But several
rebel officials said on Thursday that the agreement did include the former
Nusra Front - now known as Jabhat Fateh al-Sham - which announced in July that
it was severing ties with al Qaeda.
The powerful
Islamist insurgent group Ahrar al-Sham said it had not signed the ceasefire
agreement because of "reservations" but did not elaborate.
RUSSIA-TURKEY
DETENTE
The deal also
follows a thaw in ties between Russia and Turkey.
In a sign of
the detente, the Turkish armed forces said on Friday Russian aircraft had
carried out three air strikes against Islamic State in the area of al-Bab in
northern Syria.
"A lot of
people have postponed selling gains this year, expecting that they are going to
have lower tax brackets next year," said Paul Nolte, portfolio manager at
Kingsview Asset Management in Chicago. "So we might see a weaker open to
the year as investors take some of those gains that they have waited to
do."
Trump takes
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administration will be able to fulfill its reflationary policies that were
anticipated in the wake of the election and that helped drive the end-of-year
rally.
"There
was a tinge more enthusiasm not only because Trump won, and that is perceived
as less headwinds for business, but also because the Republicans were able to
hold onto the Senate, which was unexpected," said Scott Wren, senior
global equity strategist at Wells Fargo Investment Institute in St. Louis.
"But it’s
not like all these deals are rubber-stamp deals. They are going to have to be
refined, debated, you don’t know what the magnitude is, and they have to be
implemented."
REUTERS
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