Hurritan and Malah Ceasefire

Country/entity
Syria
Region
Middle East and North Africa
Agreement name
Hurritan and Malah Ceasefire
Date
16 Feb 2014
Agreement status
Multiparty signed/agreed
Interim arrangement
Yes
Agreement/conflict level
Intrastate/local conflict
Stage
Ceasefire/related
Conflict nature
Inter-group
Peace process
Syrian Local Agreements
Parties
Jaysh al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar, ‘Abd al-Karim al-Awkarani [Illegible]
Harakat Ahrar al-Sham al-Islamiyya, Abu ‘Amir al-Shami [Illegible]
Liva’ Shuhada Badr, ‘Abd al-Khalaq Abu Ahmad [Illegible]
Third parties
The agreement was made in the presence of Sheikh Abu ‘Amir, representative of Harakat Ahrar al- Sham al-Islamiyya and in the presence of two representatives of the two sides.
Description
Eight point ceasefire calling for an end to hostilities, prisoner release, Jaysh al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar to remain in their current location; to not set up in areas occupied by families; division of power over the checkpoints; that weapons cases before the respective date of signature will not be dropped; that Shuhada Badr will not set up in the Malah area; that the sides will support each other in the fight against the Syrian regime.


Groups

Children/youth

No specific mention.

Disabled persons

No specific mention.

Elderly/age

No specific mention.

Migrant workers

No specific mention.

Racial/ethnic/national group

No specific mention.

Religious groups

No specific mention.

Indigenous people

No specific mention.

Other groups

No specific mention.

Refugees/displaced persons

No specific mention.

Social class

No specific mention.


Gender

Women, girls and gender

No specific mention.

Men and boys

No specific mention.

LGBTI

No specific mention.

Family
Page 1, Fourth: The two sides have agreed to not form a headquarters among the residing families of the other side.

State definition

Nature of state (general)

No specific mention.

State configuration

No specific mention.

Self determination

No specific mention.

Referendum

No specific mention.

State symbols

No specific mention.

Independence/secession

No specific mention.

Accession/unification

No specific mention.

Border delimitation

No specific mention.

Cross-border provision

No specific mention.


Governance

Political institutions (new or reformed)

No specific mention.

Elections

No specific mention.

Electoral commission

No specific mention.

Political parties reform

No specific mention.

Civil society

No specific mention.

Traditional/religious leaders

No specific mention.

Public administration

No specific mention.

Constitution

No specific mention.


Power sharing

Political power sharing

No specific mention.

Territorial power sharing

No specific mention.

Economic power sharing

No specific mention.

Military power sharing

No specific mention.


Human rights and equality

Human rights/RoL general

No specific mention.

Bill of rights/similar

No specific mention.

Treaty incorporation

No specific mention.

Civil and political rights

No specific mention.

Socio-economic rights

No specific mention.


Rights related issues

Citizenship

No specific mention.

Democracy

No specific mention.

Detention procedures

No specific mention.

Media and communication

No specific mention.

Mobility/access

No specific mention.

Protection measures

No specific mention.

Other

No specific mention.


Rights institutions

NHRI

No specific mention.

Regional or international human rights institutions

No specific mention.


Justice sector reform

Criminal justice and emergency law

No specific mention.

State of emergency provisions

No specific mention.

Judiciary and courts

No specific mention.

Prisons and detention

No specific mention.

Traditional Laws
Page 1, First: The two sides have agreed to a full suspension of hostilities. [They have also agreed] to refer all outstanding issues between them, as well as emerging issues, to the rightful law of Allah by the arbitration of the Sharia [Shari’ah] Board in Aleppo.

Page 1, Fifth: The checkpoints in the area belong to the Shariah Board, Ahrar al-Sham and Jubhat al-Nusra. It is illegal for any muahjir or masked person to be stationed at the checkpoint.

Socio-economic reconstruction

Development or socio-economic reconstruction

No specific mention.

National economic plan

No specific mention.

Natural resources

No specific mention.

International funds

No specific mention.

Business

No specific mention.

Taxation

No specific mention.

Banks

No specific mention.


Land, property and environment

Land reform/rights

No specific mention.

Pastoralist/nomadism rights

No specific mention.

Cultural heritage

No specific mention.

Environment

No specific mention.

Water or riparian rights or access

No specific mention.


Security sector

Security Guarantees

No specific mention.

Ceasefire
Security sector→Ceasefire→Ceasefire provision
Page 1, First: The two sides have agreed to a full suspension of hostilities. [They have also agreed] to refer all outstanding issues between them, as well as emerging issues, to the rightful law of Allah by the arbitration of the Sharia [Shari’ah] Board in Aleppo.

Page 1, Fourth: The two sides have agreed to not form a headquarters among the residing families of the other side.

Page 1, Fifth: The checkpoints in the area belong to the Shariah Board, Ahrar al-Sham and Jubhat al-Nusra. It is illegal for any muahjir or masked person to be stationed at the checkpoint.

Page 1, Seventh: Liva’ Shuhada Badr vows to not form military headquarters in Malah or its surroundings.

Page 1, Eighth: The two sides vow to give all forms of support to each other in the battle against the regime of al-Assad, according to their capacity.
Police

No specific mention.

Armed forces

No specific mention.

DDR
Security sector→DDR→Demilitarisation provisions
Page 1, Fifth: The checkpoints in the area belong to the Shariah Board, Ahrar al-Sham and Jubhat al-Nusra. It is illegal for any muahjir or masked person to be stationed at the checkpoint.
Intelligence services

No specific mention.

Parastatal/rebel and opposition group forces
Page 1, Third: The brothers in Jaysh al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar will remain in their headquarters in the area excepting the houses owned by the Shuhada’ Badr that were given to them.
Withdrawal of foreign forces

No specific mention.

Corruption

No specific mention.

Crime/organised crime

No specific mention.

Drugs

No specific mention.

Terrorism

No specific mention.


Transitional justice

Transitional justice general

No specific mention.

Amnesty/pardon

No specific mention.

Courts

No specific mention.

Mechanism

No specific mention.

Prisoner release
Page 1, Second: Both sides will immediately and unconditionally release all prisoners.
Vetting

No specific mention.

Victims

No specific mention.

Missing persons

No specific mention.

Reparations

No specific mention.

Reconciliation

No specific mention.


Implementation

UN signatory

No specific mention.

Other international signatory

No specific mention.

Referendum for agreement

No specific mention.

International mission/force/similar

No specific mention.

Enforcement mechanism

No specific mention.

Related cases

No specific mention.

Source
J Pazaszczuk. ‘Syria: Did Jaish al-Mahajireen wal-Ansar Sign agreement with Free Syrian Army’s Shuhada Badr?’, February 17, 2014, https://bit.ly/2qmqwaJ [accessed January 10, 2017]

Unnamed Agreement, (Hurritan and Malah Ceasefire), 16 February 2014

In the Name of Allah the Merciful

This is what was agreed between Jaysh al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar - represented by Brother ‘Abd al- Karim al-Awkarani – and Liva’ Shuhada’ Badr [The Badr Martyrs Brigade] – represented by ‘Abd al- Khalaq Abu Ahmad – regarding the problems in the areas of Hurritan and Malah and their surroundings.

First:

The two sides have agreed to a full suspension of hostilities. [

They have also agreed] to refer all outstanding issues between them, as well as emerging issues, to the rightful law of Allah by the arbitration of the Sharia [Shari’ah] Board in Aleppo.

Second:

Both sides will immediately and unconditionally release all prisoners.

Third:

The brothers in Jaysh al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar will remain in their headquarters in the area

excepting the houses owned by the Shuhada’ Badr that were given to them.

Fourth:

The two sides have agreed to not form a headquarters among the residing families of the other side.

Fifth:

The checkpoints in the area belong to the Shariah Board, Ahrar al-Sham and Jubhat al-Nusra.

It is illegal for any muahjir or masked person to be stationed at the checkpoint.

Sixth:

The two sides have agreed that no incidents [cases] linked to weapons before the date of the agreement should be lifted.

Seventh:

Liva’ Shuhada Badr vows to not form military headquarters in Malah or its surroundings.

Eighth:

The two sides vow to give all forms of support to each other in the battle against the

regime of al-Assad, according to their capacity.

The agreement was made in the presence of Sheikh Abu ‘Amir, representative of Harakat Ahrar al- Sham al-Islamiyya and in the presence of two representatives of the two sides.

Monday:

16/2/2014 AD 16/4/1435 Hijri

Jaysh al-Muhajireen wal-Ansar ‘Abd al-Karim al-Awkarani

[Illegible]

Harakat Ahrar al-Sham al-Islamiyya

Abu ‘Amir al-Shami [Illegible]

Liva’ Shuhada Badr

Praised be Allah, Lord of the Two Worlds

‘Abd al-Khalaq Abu Ahmad [Illegible]