A plan to begin a temporary ceasefire in Syria within a week has been agreed by the major powers.

The decision was hailed as an "important step" towards ending the civil war in the country y UK Foreign Secretary Philip Hammond.

The ceasefire does not apply to extremist groups Islamic State (IS) and al-Nusra Front.

The agreement by world powers, including Russia, is the latest twist in a conflict which has killed an estimated quarter of a million people and displaced millions of refugees, many of whom have headed for Europe.

Mr Hammond welcomed the settlement but warned it would succeed only if Russia ceased bombing moderate opposition groups.

He said: "The International Syria Support Group (ISSG) meeting in Munich committed members to achieving a cessation of hostilities within a week, to delivering humanitarian assistance to named besieged communities by this weekend and to facilitating rapid progress in negotiations aimed at political transition.

If implemented fully and properly by every ISSG member, this will be an important step towards relieving the killing and suffering in Syria- UK Foreign Secretary

"If implemented fully and properly by every ISSG member, this will be an important step towards relieving the killing and suffering in Syria. But it will only succeed if there is a major change of behaviour by the Syrian regime and its supporters.

"Russia, in particular, claims to be attacking terrorist groups and yet consistently bombs non-extremist groups including civilians. If this agreement is to work, this bombing will have to stop: no cessation of hostilities will last if moderate opposition groups continue to be targeted."

Russian foreign minister Sergey Lavrov said Russian air strikes against terrorist groups would continue and again denied there had been strikes against civilians in rebel-held areas.

Mr Kerry said the proposed truce would depend on "whether or not all the parties honour those commitments and implement them".

We are doing everything in our power diplomatically to bring an end to this conflict.- Kerry

He described it as a "pause" in the long-running conflict but added a long-term solution depended on the Syrian government led by Bashar Assad and opposition groups engaging in "genuine negotiation" about the way forward.

He said: "We are doing everything in our power diplomatically to bring an end to this conflict. The ISSG is engaged actively in the implementation of the ceasefire.

"This is still a complicated conflict, with increasing levels of violence, increasing numbers of terrorists."

The world powers agreed to "accelerate and expand" the delivery of humanitarian aid to civilians in seven besieged areas of the country and work towards a "Syrian-led" political transition.

Mr Kerry admitted difference remained over the role Assad would play in Syria's future but stressed the need for further diplomacy, saying: "We have to be at the table to do that."
 

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