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Eastern Ghouta crisis: Russia considers ceasefire in Syria after UN plea

Civil defence rescue workers help a man from a shelter after an air strike in the besieged town of Douma in eastern Ghouta, 22 February 2018: REUTERS
Civil defence rescue workers help a man from a shelter after an air strike in the besieged town of Douma in eastern Ghouta, 22 February 2018: REUTERS

Russia has said it will consider supporting the UN-proposed ceasefire in Syria as long as it does not cover Isis and al Qaeda-linked groups.

A 30-day nationwide ceasefire is possible as long as it does not cover Isis, the Nusra Front and other groups "who are shelling residential quarters of Damascus", Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said on Thursday.

The UN security council is due to meet later on Thursday to discuss an emergency resolution aimed at halting the ferocious Syrian government led assault on the rebel-held enclave of eastern Ghouta. The five-day operation has so far killed more than 400 people and hit 22 medical facilities, monitors and locals say.

Russia, a key ally of Syrian President Bashar al Assad, has historically used its position as a permanent member of the security council to veto most UN action in Syria's war.

The Syrian and Russian air forces have been accused by various humanitarian groups of indiscriminately targeting civilian infrastructure and using barrel bombs, crude weapons filled with explosives banned under international law. Both deny the allegations.

On Thursday, the Kremlin said that Russia was not responsible for the escalating humanitarian crisis.

“Those who support the terrorists are responsible,” Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov told reporters during a conference call.

“Neither Russia, nor Syria, nor Iran are in that category of states as they are waging an absolute war against terrorists in Syria.”

Eastern Ghouta is technically covered by a de-escalation agreement reached by world powers last year.

The regime says al Qaeda-linked groups operating in the area are not part of the deal - raising the possibility that Russia's openness to a ceasefire deal would not include the current operation there.

In recent months the Assad government has tightened the five-year-old siege on eastern Ghouta, leaving the area’s 400,000 residents with dwindling food and medical supplies.

The new aerial attack - some of the worst violence in Syria’s seven-year-old war - appears to be paving the way for a ground assault to seize the enclave once and for all.

Rebels have responded with some of the worst rocket attacks on Damascus in years, killing 16 people.

On Thursday the UN repeated pleas to all parties for a ceasefire across the country and unfettered access for aid convoys.

“There is a need for avoiding the massacre, because we will be judged by history,” Syria envoy Staffan de Mistura said.