World

Ceasefire holds as Aleppo awaits UN aid shipments

Russia and a war monitor said the Syrian army had begun to withdraw from a road into Aleppo on Thursday, a prerequisite for pressing ahead with international peacemaking efforts as the government and rebels accused each other of violating a truce.

United Nations says both rebels and Syrian government delaying the delivery of humanitarian aid

People walk near Castello road in Aleppo, Syria, on Monday. (Abdalrhman Ismail/Reuters)

Russia and a war monitor said the Syrian army had begun to withdraw from a road into Aleppo on Thursday, a prerequisite for pressing ahead with international peacemaking efforts as the government and rebels accused each other of violating a truce. 

However, insurgent groups present in Aleppo said they still had not seen the army withdrawing from the Castello Road, needed to allow aid deliveries into the city, and would not pull back from their own positions near the road until they did. 

The Pentagon said it could not confirm reports of a withdrawal but U.S. State Department spokesman Mark Toner said that the ceasefire was holding "by and large," adding that both Washington and Moscow believed it was worth continuing. 

But there were growing accusations of violations by each side, with a Syrian military source saying the rebels were responsible for dozens of breaches including gun, rocket and mortar fire in Damascus, Aleppo, Hama, Homs and Latakia.

The rebels said Syrian army jets had struck in Hama and Idlib, and used artillery near Damascus.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based war monitor, said that while it had documented attacks by both sides, relative calm had persisted in most areas and it had not recorded any civilian deaths for a third consecutive day.

A boy carries a toy gun while riding a pick-up truck with other boys during a demonstration calling for aid to reach Aleppo. (Abdalrhman Ismail/Reuters)

Control of the Castello Road is divided between the government and rebels who have been battling to topple President Bashar al-Assad for more than five years. It has been a major frontline in the war.

"The Syrian army ... began the staged withdrawal of vehicles and personnel from the Castello Road to ensure the unimpeded delivery of aid to eastern Aleppo," said Lt.-Gen. Vladimir Savchenko, head of the Russian Reconciliation Centre in Syria in remarks broadcast on state television.

The Observatory said the army had started to withdraw from positions on the road, but that Russian troops, whose air force has helped Damascus to blockade rebel-held Aleppo, had replaced it. An official in an Aleppo-based Syrian rebel group said late on Thursday that the army had still not pulled back. "There is no withdrawal by the regime from the Castello Road," Zakaria Malahifji, of the Aleppo-based rebel group Fastaqim, told Reuters.

UN waiting to deliver aid

The United Nations Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said the United States and Russia were expected to manage the disengagement of forces from the road, but also criticized Damascus for failing to provide permits needed to make aid deliveries to other areas.

The UN humanitarian adviser Jan Egeland said both the rebels and the government were responsible for delaying aid deliveries into Aleppo.

"The reason we're not in eastern Aleppo has again been a combination of very difficult and detailed discussions around security monitoring and passage of roadblocks, which is both opposition and government," he said.

A vendor sells corn on the cob and noodles on the last day of Eid al-Adha celebrations in the rebel held besieged town of Hamouriyeh, eastern Ghouta, near Damascus, Syria, on Thursday. (Bassam Khabieh/Reuters)

In other areas, de Mistura was categorical about blaming the Syrian government, saying it had not yet provided the proper permits.

The Syrian government has said all aid deliveries must be conducted in co-ordination with it. France, which backs the opposition, became the first U.S. ally to publicly question the deal with Moscow, urging Washington to share details of the agreement and saying that without aid for Aleppo, it was not credible.

About 300,000 people are thought to be living in eastern Aleppo, while more than one million live in the government-controlled western half of the city.

Two convoys of aid for Aleppo have been waiting in no-man's land to proceed to Aleppo after crossing the Turkish border.

If a green light was given, a spokesman for the UN Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs said the first 20 trucks would move to Aleppo and if they reached the city safely, the second convoy would then also leave.

The two convoys were carrying enough food for 80,000 people for a month, he said.

The United States and Russia have backed opposing sides in the Syrian war that has killed hundreds of thousands of people, forced 11 million from their homes, and created the world's worst refugee crisis since the Second World War. 

Aleppo, Syria's biggest city before the war, has been a focal point of the conflict this year. Government forces backed by militias from Iran, Iraq, and Lebanon have recently achieved their long-held objective of encircling the rebel-held east.

With files from The Associated Press