Turkey's foreign minister says no civilians
will be removed from Syria's northwestern Idlib province under a deal
signed by Ankara and Moscow to create a demilitarised zone in the area.
"The borders of Idlib will be protected under the
memorandum of understanding signed in Sochi. There would be no change in
the status of Idlib," Mevlut Cavusoglu said on Tuesday, adding that merely "terrorist" groups were to be removed from the area.
The agreement to
halt plans for an offensive on the last major rebel-held stronghold was
announced in the Black Sea resort of Sochi on Monday after a meeting
between the Russian President Vladimir Putin and his Turkish counterpart, Recep Tayyip Erdogan.
On Tuesday, Iran's foreign minister hailed the agreement over the
rebel-held province, calling it an example of "responsible diplomacy".On his Twitter account, Zarif wrote: "Intensive responsible diplomacy over the last few weeks-pursued in my visits to Ankara & Damascus, followed by the Iran-Russia-Turkey Summit in Tehran and the meeting [in] Sochi-is succeeding to avert war in #Idlib with a firm commitment to fight extremist terror. Diplomacy works."
Later on Tuesday, European Union Spokesperson Maja Kocijancic stressed that the Turkish-Russian deal must protect civilians and ensure humanitarian access.
"We expect that the agreement which was according to reports reached yesterday by the Russian and Turkish presidents will guarantee the protection of civilian lives and infrastructure as well as guarantee unhindered and sustainable humanitarian access," Kocijancic told reporters.
Iran has fought as an ally of President Bashar al-Assad in the Syrian conflict alongside Russian forces, while Turkey supported certain rebel groups during the seven-year-old civil war.
'Withdrawal in October'
Announcing the deal alongside Erdogan on Monday, Putin said the 15-20km-wide zone would be established by October 15.Putin said that heavy weapons would be withdrawn from all opposition forces by October 10 - a move supported by the Syrian government.
Describing the agreement as a "serious result", Putin said that "Russia and Turkey have confirmed their determination to counter terrorism in Syria in all its forms".
For his part, Erdogan said both his country and Russia would carry out coordinated patrols in the demilitarised zone.
"We decided on the establishment of a region that is cleaned of weapons between the areas which are under the control of the opposition and the regime," said Erdogan.
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