A Syrian man carrying a bicycle makes his way through the rubble of destroyed buildings following a reported air strike on the rebel-held Salihin neighbourhood of the northern city of Aleppo, on September 11, 2016 (Photo: AFP)
Syrian children played under quiet skies on Tuesday as a fragile truce held, but their parents were waiting for much-needed food, fuel and medicine to enter the country's besieged areas.
In the Shaar neighbourhood of rebel-held eastern Aleppo, children laughed as they ran through the streets, enjoying an opportunity to escape the confines of homes and bomb shelters.
One group played football under the remains of a destroyed bridge, while others pushed each other on swings.
For their parents, however, the welcome quiet was tempered by anxiety about when the humanitarian aid promised under the Russian-US accord might finally arrive.
"The truce is good, but it's not enough. We want food to come in," said Abu Jamil, a resident of the Ansari neighbourhood in besieged eastern Aleppo.
"The situation is still bad as the markets are empty," the 55-year-old told AFP.
Some 250,000 people living in the ravaged east of Aleppo have been under government siege for most of the past two months, after the Syrian army seized the key Castello Road running from Turkey into the city.
Rebel forces briefly opened a new route into Aleppo in August, but the government sealed that off in early September, restoring a siege that has prompted shortages in the eastern neighbourhoods.
The rebel-held part of the city has also come under frequent government fire, although on Tuesday residents were savouring a day out in the sun after a rare quiet night's sleep.
Despite the calm, many markets remained closed because of lack of produce, with the few stalls still open displaying meagre offerings of aubergines, courgettes and a few herbs such as parsley.
"We saw on the television that aid would come in after 20 hours of the truce, but we haven't seen anything," said 23-year-old Mohammad Hashisho in eastern Aleppo's Kallaseh district.
The United Nations said on Tuesday that aid convoys could not begin moving until security was assured, and that the process of assessing the truce's durability was taking time.
No aid has entered eastern Aleppo since early July, and residents there are among hundreds of thousands of people living under sieges in Syria.
The US-Russian deal calls for the demilitarisation of the Castello Road route into Aleppo, and Russia has already deployed troops on the road to monitor the area.
In the rebel-held town of Douma, in Damascus province, which has been under siege since 2013, doctors said they were hoping the deal would mean the arrival of much-need medical supplies.
"We're waiting to fill up our warehouses with medicine and other essential materials that haven't entered since we came under siege," said Yasser al-Shami, head of a makeshift local hospital.
"We are waiting for essential medical supplies to enter for dialysis sessions," added Abu Hamza, a technician in the local dialysis unit.
"There is nothing left of the last aid" that entered in mid-June, he said.
"Any delay will have a negative effect on the health of the patients."
In government-held western Aleppo, which is regularly targeted by rebel rocket fire, residents enjoyed the quiet of the morning and expressed hope that the truce would last.
The initial ceasefire is due to last 48 hours, and can be renewed every 48 hours after that for as long as it holds.
"I hope it will be serious. I hope I'll no longer hear the cries of the wounded in the hospital," said Alaa Jomaa, who abandoned his studies in economics to become a nurse during the war.
"It is heartrending to hear the cries every time we remove rocket shrapnel from people's bodies.
"Today, for the first time, I didn't hear those cries."
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