The Jerusalem Post

Syrian Army announces second cease-fire in two weeks

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BEIRUT (Reuters) – The Syrian Army said it would suspend combat operations in southern Syria until Thursday, including in Quneitra province, where Israel has hit army outposts in recent days, according to a statement carried by Syrian state television.

The Syrian General Command said the ceasefire took effect from midday Sunday and was being done to support “reconcilia­tion efforts” in the second unilateral cease-fire of the last two weeks.

A spokesman for the Southern Front, a coalition of Free Syrian Army rebel groups, cast doubt on whether the Syrian Army and its Iranian-backed allies would halt attacks on the front lines in Deraa and in Quneitra province.

“The Free Syrian Army are very distrustfu­l of the regime’s intentions in abiding by the ceasefire. It will be like the previous one,” Maj. Issam al Rayes told Reuters.

On June 17, the army announced a cease-fire that only affected fighting in the city of Deraa along the border with Israel.

The latest announceme­nt extends the ceasefire from Deraa to the whole of southern Syria, including the southweste­rn Quneitra province near the border with Israel and Sweida province in the southeast.

Rebels launched an offensive last week against government-held Baath, the provincial capital of the Syrian Golan Heights. They made initial gains on the southern and western fringes of the city, but an army counteratt­ack mostly pushed the rebels back to their former positions.

The Israeli Army has also struck several times at Syrian Army outposts in the area, where the Iranian-backed Hezbollah has a strong presence, saying it was retaliatin­g for errant fire from Syria’s positions there.

 ?? (Omar Sanadiki/Reuters) ?? SYRIAN DEPUTY Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad gestures during a news conference in Damascus yesterday.
(Omar Sanadiki/Reuters) SYRIAN DEPUTY Foreign Minister Faisal Mekdad gestures during a news conference in Damascus yesterday.

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