Syria's leading opposition High Negotiations Committee today expressed "concern" about a deal for safe zones, saying it "lacks safeguards and compliance mechanisms."
Syrian government backers Iran and Russia, and rebel supporter Turkey, on Thursday signed a deal during talks in Kazakh capital Astana setting up four "de-escalation zones" in Syria.
But neither the government nor the rebels were direct signatories to the deal, and the opposition's reaction was lukewarm.
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It said the agreement "lacks the minimal elements of legitimacy" and also rejected any role for government ally Iran as a guarantor of the deal.
The rebel delegation at Astana had already made clear its objections to the deal, particularly Iran's role as a sponsor.
"We do not at all agree that Iran... Is a guarantor of this accord," said rebel spokesman Osama Abu Zeid yesterday.
Several members of the rebel delegation left the room shouting in protest as the signing ceremony got underway in Astana, also angered by Iran's role.
The deal calls for the establishment of four "de- escalation" zones across stretches of eight Syrian provinces.
Security zones on the edges of the areas would be set up to monitor and ensure access, with forces from the three guarantor nations manning checkpoints and observation posts.
The deal seeks to ground all military aviation in the four areas, including flights by the US-led coalition fighting the Islamic State group.
But it calls for continued action against IS as well as the former Al-Qaeda affiliate now known as Fateh al-Sham Front.
The deal is the latest bid to end more than six years of conflict that have killed over 320,000 people since anti- government protests erupted in March 2011.
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