Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said Syrian forces had "nearly wiped out the terrorists" in the rebel-held enclave of Eastern Ghouta.
Backed by the Russian military since 2015, the Syrian regime in February launched a massive offensive against rebels in the Damascus suburb, killing more that 1,600 civilians.
"As a result of this anti-terrorism operation in Eastern Ghouta, terrorist elements have nearly been wiped out of this suburb of the Syrian capital," Lavrov yesterday said at press conference in Moscow after meeting UN Syrian envoy Staffan de Mistura.
"Civilian life is going to be re-established there," Lavrov said, adding that "the majority of the rebels have been evacuated".
Syrian troops have recaptured more than 90 per cent of Ghouta, and are draining the last opposition pockets with negotiated pull-outs mediated by Russia.
Moscow has secured two such deals already and has been pressing Jaish al-Islam, the rebel faction in control of the third and final part of the enclave near Damascus, to leave too.
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Russia's deputy foreign minister Mikhail Bogdanov said yesterday negotiations with Jaish al-Islam were continuing.
"There are working group contacts. They contact us, they write letters, they talk on the phone, we meet," he was quoted as saying by the Ria Novosti agency.
"There exists" some chance that the negotiations could progress, he added.
De Mistura also met with Russian Defence Minister Sergei Choigu who said over the next few days "we are going to begin to bring the people back to their homes in Eastern Ghouta, and they will be able to lead a normal life".
He added that "more than 130,000 refugees and more than 11,000 armed fighters" had fled Ghouta via humanitarian corridors.
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