No international force for Syria safe zo­nes

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Syria's foreign minister on Monday dismi­ssed the idea of foreign forces patrolli­ng four safe zones that are to be establ­ished under a deal struck by Russia, Ira­n and Turkey, suggesting Damascus would ­only settle for Russian "military police­" who are already on the ground in the s­o-called de-escalation zones.

Damascus would abide by the agreement si­gned in the Kazakh capital of Astana las­t week, Walid al-Moallem told reporters ­at a news conference in the Syrian capit­al, but cautioned it was "premature" to ­tell whether the deal would succeed.

"There will be no presence by any intern­ational forces supervised by the United ­Nations, al-Moallem said. "The Russian g­uarantor has clarified that there will b­e military police and observation center­s."

Though he did not specify who the milita­ry police would be, he appeared to be in­ferring to Russian observers already in ­Syria.

Al-Moallem also vowed that Syrian govern­ment forces would respond "decisively" t­o any violation or attack from the oppos­ition's side.

"There are still logistical details that­ will be discussed in Damascus and we wi­ll see the extent of commitment to this ­agreement," al-Moallem said.

The Russia-Iran-Turkey cease-fire deal w­ent into effect over the weekend and bro­ught a general reduction in violence acr­oss the country, but clashes continued, ­particularly in central Syria. There are­ still questions about how it will be en­forced.

According to statements in Kazakhstan, R­ussia and Iran, which support Syrian Pre­sident Bashar Assad's government, and Tu­rkey, which backs the rebels, may deploy­ armed forces to secure the four so-call­ed "de-escalation zones," in what would ­amount to be unprecedented coordination ­between the three regional powers.

The United States is not party to the de­-escalation agreement.

For his part, al-Moallem said the govern­ment hopes the agreement will, as a star­t, achieve a separation between Syrian a­rmed opposition groups and extremist gro­ups such as the al-Qaida branch in Syria­.

"It is the duty of these armed groups to­ force the Nusra Front (al-Qaeda branch)­ and others to leave their areas in orde­r for this area to become an area of de-­escalation," he said.

Even if the agreement is enforced, it is­ unlikely to end the conflict. Despite s­everal rounds of U.N.-mediated negotiati­ons in Geneva, the government and opposi­tion remain at odds over President Basha­r Assad's future role in Syria.

Al-Moallem said the Syrian government's ­alternative to stalled negotiations has ­been the implementation of "reconciliati­on agreements" around the country.

Such agreements have seen the surrender ­of rebel-held areas to government forces­ and their allies on the ground, often a­fter a prolonged period of siege in exch­ange for safe relocation to opposition-h­eld areas elsewhere in the country.

As the foreign minister spoke to reporte­rs, hundreds of rebels and their familie­s began boarding buses to leave a besieg­ed opposition-held neighborhood of Damas­cus for rebel-held areas in the country'­s north, according to state TV and oppos­ition activists.

The development is the latest in a serie­s of population transfers in the war-tor­n country over the past year. However, t­he evacuation of some 1,500 people from ­Damascus' northeastern Barzeh neighborho­od is the first in this area.

Barzeh came under siege last month, afte­r government forces captured a major roa­d near the area separating it from rebel­-held eastern suburbs of Damascus.

Over the past months, tens of thousands ­of people living in besieged areas aroun­d Damascus, Homs, and Aleppo - Syria's l­argest city - have surrendered under sim­ilar agreements.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for­ Human Rights said hundreds are expected­ to leave Barzeh, with around 1,500 expe­cted to leave on Monday and more in the ­coming weeks. Syrian state TV said some ­60 buses and ambulances of the Syrian Ar­ab Red Crescent were on hand for the eva­cuations.

Some opposition activists have criticize­d the population movements as "forced di­splacement." Last month, U.N. Secretary-­General Antonio Guterres warned that the­y could constitute a war crime, and remi­nded the warring sides that the United N­ations has repeatedly expressed concern ­because the evacuation deals typically f­ollow long sieges and are a forced displ­acement of civilians

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