A bloody spasm of violence was reported to have killed almost 130 people Sunday in Syria as the United States announced that it and Russia had reached a “provisional agreement” on a cease-fire in the civil war-torn country.
The official Syrian news agency SANA said 83 people were killed and 178 others were wounded in three bombings near a Shiite shrine in Damascus.
Meanwhile, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 46 people were killed by two suicide bombers in the al-Zahraa neighborhood of Homs. At least 28 of the victims in Homs were civilians, said the observatory, a British-based human rights watchdog that is widely considered to be authoritative.
The violence came on the same day that U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said Washington and Moscow had negotiated a “provisional” deal on a truce in Syria’s civil war.
RELATED: Syria’s Assad: Ready for truce if ‘terrorists’ don’t exploit it
World powers, which have been pushing for a halt in Syria’s nearly five-year civil war, had hoped to see a truce take effect on Friday but have struggled to agree on the terms.
Kerry said in remarks in Amman with Jordanian Foreign Minister Nasser Judeh that he had spoken with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov three times to secure a “cessation of hostilities that could begin in the coming days.”
Kerry provided no details, and he acknowledged that a way to enforce the agreement still hadn’t been determined.
U.S. President Barack Obama and Russian President Putin also have yet to sign off on the terms, but Kerry said he expects the two leaders to “speak somewhere in the next days or so in order to try to complete this task.”
RELATED: Clinic in Syria destroyed by airstrike, Doctors Without Borders says









