A series
of local truce deals in and around Damascus between the Syrian regime and rebel
forces are being used for short-term political gain and are likely to be
short-lived, opposition sources predict. The truces, struck in the key
rebel-held areas of Yarmouk, Moadamieh and Barzeh, appear to be timed with
peace talks between the regime, its opponents and their rival international
sponsors in Geneva.
The
first round of talks, which ended last week, failed to reach any agreement on
what was pitched as a trial balloon in the form of “confidence-building”
measures – the delivery of food and medical aid to government besieged,
rebel-held quarters of Old Homs. The stalemate over the agreement appeared to
break Thursday, four days ahead of the next round of talks in Geneva, with the
Syrian Foreign Ministry announcing civilians would be evacuated and aid allowed
in to the area.
But
in Damascus, locally brokered cease-fires in the three strategic areas have
already taken place, presenting previously unthinkable compromises on both
sides.
The
Syrian government has heralded the cease-fires on state media as the successful
results of “national reconciliation efforts.”
But,
while the circumstances of each of the deals differ markedly between the three
neighborhoods, opposition elements in all three say the apparent compromises
are deceptive, amounting to blackmail through starvation and threats of
violence, and an attempt by the regime to shore up territory and score political
points domestically and abroad during the Geneva negotiation process.
They
point to conditions imposed by the government for the handover of rebel
activists and fighters, the arrest and killing of civilians after guarantees
were made for their safe evacuation, and fears of violent attack if conditions
are rejected, as proof of a lack of goodwill on the part of the regime and no
promise of lasting peace.
Both
the government and the rebels accuse the other of using civilians in besieged
neighborhoods as human shields. Both also present any deals reached as proof
they are acting in the interests of trapped civilians.
State agency SANA published Wednesday pictures of what it said were hundreds of displaced families returning to Moadamieh, southwest of Damascus.
SANA
blamed “terrorists” for the violence that displaced thousands of residents and
said security had been established through the efforts of the national
reconciliation commission.
According
to opposition activists involved in negotiations in Moadamieh, the agreement
was seen more as a temporary surrender to a brutal shelling campaign and
“starvation siege” that saw the government restrict food and essential supplies
for months and resulted in the deaths of about a dozen people.
Moadamieh
residents were offered food and basics in return for the handing-over of arms,
rebel fighters and media activists, as well as the installment of a
regime-appointed governor, they said.
High-profile
activist Qusai Zakarya told The Daily Star ahead of Geneva that “the regime is
working very hard to secure the capital ahead of the Geneva talks. [They want
to] take credit in front of the international community for the truces they
enforced.”
Divisions
have also emerged between residents inside the city over whether to accept the
government conditions.
Last
Thursday, Zakarya said his vocal opposition to the unfair conditions of the
deal had made him a target of both the government and other residents who
sought to secure food aid. The following day he agreed to the government
condition that he leave, but said he feared for his life. In an earlier truce
in October, dozens of people were arrested after the government agreed to
evacuate civilians from the city.
Opposition
activists with the “Solidarity with Qusai Zakarya Hunger Strike Under Siege in
Moadamiya, Syria” Facebook page told The Daily Star late Thursday while a
meeting between Zakarya and government officials in Damascus appeared to have
gone “well,” he was yet to be released.
Earlier this month, following months of failed negotiations, food aid finally arrived in trickles to the Palestinian camp of Yarmouk, south of Damascus. A crippling yearlong siege has generated desperate humanitarian conditions and drove out more than 85 percent of the original 160,000 population. The U.N. has documented the deaths of dozens of people from malnutrition, while residents have reported eating herbs mixed in water and animal feed to survive.
The
U.N. Palestinian Refugee Agency UNRWA says it has now distributed some 3,000
food parcels to Yarmouk. A limited number of very ill residents were also
evacuated from the neighborhood Saturday. But while securing limited relief,
the deal is a long way from a permanent cessation of hostilities.
The
government and pro-government factions had accused armed opposition and their
rival Palestinian militants of holding the camp hostage and not honoring a
previous deal to disarm. Opposition groups say the government has starved the
camp as a form of collective punishment to force surrender. Humanitarian
workers and the government traded blame for attacks on aid convoys attempting
to enter the camp, while Damascus complained food parcels may be directed to
rebels. Some reports suggested evacuees had been arrested after leaving the
camp.
As
in Moadamieh, residents reported increased factional tensions between those who
support the truce and those who oppose it.
In
Barzeh, lying adjacent to Damascus to the north, a truce reached appeared more
favorable to the rebels.
Photos have been used to accuse Barzeh rebels of jointly manning checkpoints with regime troops after the truce was concluded.
Barzeh
was one of the first parts of the capital to see protests against the regime of
President Bashar Assad, and while fierce clashes between Free Syrian Army
rebels and government forces wrought large-scale destruction and forced
thousands to flee, Barzeh has maintained a significant pro-Assad population.
Over
a year of fighting, the government has failed to enter the area and the rebels
control two main roads leading in and out of Barzeh, possibly giving them
greater leverage in negotiations.
The
truce involved a far greater degree of coordination with rebel forces, who have
maintained an active presence inside the neighborhood alongside regular army
and loyalist militia forces.
Sari,
a university student who returned with thousands of other displaced people to
inspect the rubble – all that was left of his home – after last week’s
cease-fire, said he saw government and rebel forces manning checkpoints
alongside each other.
“It’s
crazy. Like saying: We fought and destroyed all the neighborhood, but now,
since no one can win this, let’s be friends again,” he said, adding his house
had been ransacked and looted.
“It
makes me feel angry, at least let one side win; the place is destroyed and
after all that they play football together now!”
Sari
said his family would now seek government compensation for the damage to his
home and resettle abroad. “Both sides say it is finished, but as long there are
weapons in the hands of nonstate groups, there is no guarantee that the truce
will hold.”
Zeyad
Al-Shami, an opposition activist with the Barzeh Media Center, said conditions
in the neighborhood meant the government was more willing to make concessions,
but denied the rebels had joined forces with the regime there.
Shami
said the negotiations began in response to pressure from the thousands of
destitute and displaced residents, asking to return to their homes.
“Then
Geneva comes along and delegates from the government begin to make statements,
calling for channels of communication with people and militants inside the
neighborhood.”
He
said using the rebels’ strategic advantage, an agreement was struck under which
the regime forces would withdraw, release detainees and restore basic services.
While
the regime accepted, he said there was little faith the government would not
attack after the Geneva talks concluded, adding that so far only 17 of over 360
detainees from the area had been released.
“We
saw what they did in other places in Syria, like south of Damascus. They attack
these places after the cease-fire.”
On
the shared checkpoints, he said the rebels have “fought for a year to save the
people from any harm by Assad’s army and his security forces. But there is no
normalization between our FSA and Assad’s soldiers.”
If
the regime fails to release those arrested and withdraw completely, he warned
the cease-fire would collapse. “An [FSA commander] told me so this week we are
going to cut off the main roads if they don’t start the release and withdrawal
soon,” he said.
For residents like Sari, whoever deserves the credit for even a temporary cessation of hostilities is largely irrelevant.
“I am glad on a general level that the fighting is stopped, but for me, I got nothing from this truce.”
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