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Sounds of fighting had ceased in Aleppo by late Tuesday, casting a rare silent night on the embattled Syrian city, RT's Lizzie Phelan reports from the scene. An anticipated peaceful withdrawal of those militants left in the city's east remains to be confirmed.

"First hours in weeks here in #Aleppo without the sound of shelling and gunfire," Phelan tweeted late on Tuesday.

Phelan, who this year spent months on the ground in Syria, often covering developments on the frontline of fighting, reports that it is "the quietest night in Aleppo" she experienced in the last year.

Just 24 hours ago, Phelan filmed central Aleppo streets filled with celebratory gunfire and cheering people with Syrian flags, who went out despite lashing rain to welcome the reports the Battle of Aleppo might be coming to its end, with the government forces surrounding the last militant-controlled areas. The reporter later tweeted that the people were "celebrating hope returning that death will end now," referring to more than four years of fighting in the city and the random shelling that western Aleppo neighborhoods suffered from rebel-occupied east.

Phelan said she was still waiting for confirmation on the withdrawal of the militants from eastern Aleppo.

Earlier, RIA Novosti cited military sources on the ground as saying the remaining militants have agreed to withdraw and are expected to leave to rebel-held territories outside the embattled city in the coming hours.

"There is no fighting. We are coordinating the details. According to the agreement, the terrorists and their families will leave the city through the Ramusi checkpoint to the west. The buses have already been prepared," one source said.

"Total silence has been observed in the city since evening. There is no information on shooting. Probably, there were single shots fired in celebration, as on the day before," Aleppo governor's press service told the news agency.

The Al Mayadeen TV channel reported that some 5,000 militants and their families will be evacuated from the city on Wednesday. The withdrawal is supposed to be carried out with the help of the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) via a special corridor, the channel said. Some of the militants will then head to the rebel-held Idlib province.

Speaking to TASS, the ICRC's Middle East public relations officer, Krista Armstrong, said that the agreement is still in the works and the parties are "at the moment still thrashing out the details of this agreement and how it will be implemented."

"We hope it will materialize and, what is especially important is that the interests of the civilian population be taken into account," Armstrong said, confirming that the ICRC is ready to act as a "neutral humanitarian intermediary and to help the civilians in need."


On Tuesday, the UN's Syrian envoy, Staffan de Mistura, said that "a maximum 4-5 square kilometers, probably even less" were under control of the militants. He put the number of rebels that keep holding out in eastern Aleppo at 1,500, noting that about 30 percent of them represented by Al-Nusra terrorists. According to his estimates, some 50,000 civilians could be trapped in eastern Aleppo, but the exact number is unknown.

While the liberation of Aleppo from militants is expected to be soon complete, life in Syria will be not going back to normal overnight as no political settlement to the crisis has been reached, Russia's UN envoy Vitaly Churkin warned as he spoke to reporters Tuesday.

"To say that the conflict in Syria nears its end, will be, of course, exaggeration. We have still a long way to go, but we wish, that this way will return to the trajectory outlined in the resolution adopted in December last year, which stipulates the need to write a new Constitution for Syria, to hold elections under international supervision," Churkin said after the UN meeting on Syria.

Some 7,796 civilians, including 3,946 children, have been evacuated from eastern Aleppo districts within the last 24 hours, the Russian Center for Reconciliation of Warring Parties, which assisted the evacuation, reported. It added that 375 militants had laid down their arms. Since the start of the offensive, over 110,000 civilians, including 44,367 children, have been rescued from the rebel-held areas of the city. So far, around 7,000 people were able to go back to their homes in the liberated parts of eastern Aleppo from government-controlled neighborhoods.

Russia also continues to deliver tons of humanitarian aid to Aleppo civilians, the center said. Meanwhile, Russian bomb disposal specialists have been assisting in detecting and destroying explosives left by the militants in schools, hospitals and other public institutions. Those were used as militant headquarters, sharia courts or munition depots, experts on the ground have revealed. Within last 24 hours, some 1200 explosive devices have been defused by the bomb disposal crews.