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Syrian forces deploy in Hasakah under ceasefire agreement with SDF

The Syrian army has moved into the northeastern city of Hasakah, which was formerly under the control of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a first step towards implementing a US-backed ceasefire deal.

A large convoy of trucks was seen entering the city on Monday hours after the SDF declared a curfew there.

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Syrian government forces were also expected to enter the cities of Kobane and Qamishli.

The SDF reached a comprehensive agreement with the government on Friday to integrate with the Syrian army, after Kurdish-led forces ceded territory to advancing government troops in recent weeks after months of tensions and sporadic clashes.

Government forces are expected to be stationed in Syrian state buildings in Hasakah’s so-called “security zone”, a Syrian official and a Kurdish security source told the Reuters news agency ahead of the deployment.

“What’s happening here is very significant,” Al Jazeera’s Teresa Bo reported just outside of Hasakah, adding that a convoy of 150 personnel from the Syrian military had entered the city.

“Where I’m standing right now, there used to be a checkpoint run by the Kurdish-led SDF, and it is now being manned by soldiers from the Syrian army. This shows just how significant this territory is: an area that has been under the control of the SDF throughout the Syrian civil war,” she said.

The United States has hailed the agreement as a historic milestone towards unity and reconciliation after 14 years of war.

SDF integration

The SDF was ⁠once Washington’s main Syrian ally, playing a vital part in the fight against ISIL (ISIS).

But its status weakened as US President Donald Trump built ties with Syria’s President Ahmed al-Sharaa after the fall of former leader Bashar al-Assad in December 2024.

The deal announced on Friday includes the formation of a military division that will include three SDF brigades, in addition to a brigade for forces in the SDF-held town of Kobane, also known as Ain al-Arab, which will be affiliated with the state-controlled governorate of Aleppo.

The deal also provides for governing bodies in SDF-held areas to be merged with state institutions.

The ​Syrian state news agency SANA reported that Interior Ministry forces had begun deploying in rural areas near Kobane on ‌Monday.

Forest make third bid worth £25m for Celtic’s Engels

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Nottingham Forest have tabled a third bid for Celtic midfielder Arne Engels worth up to £25m.

The English Premier League club failed with an initial £14m offer for the 22-year-old Belgium international and then had an improved £17m bid also turned down.

Sources have indicated Forest’s latest proposal is still short of the Scottish club’s valuation.

Engels joined Celtic for £11m from German club Augsburg in August 2024.

He has played 89 times in all competitions for the Glasgow club and helped them win the Scottish Premiership and Scottish League Cup last season.

“Honestly, I am telling you, I didn’t know anything about it,” said interim manager Martin O’Neill when asked about Forest’s move for Engels following Celtic’s 2-0 win over Falkirk on Sunday.

“If they have, then they must have done it during the game. And I would want it rebuffed, unless it was £100m.

“Then I think the board would step in there. No, absolutely, I would rather keep him.”

Both Celtic, who O’Neill says are close to making two signings, and Forest are in the Europa League play-offs that take place this month.

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Trump and Petro clash over how best to uproot Colombia’s cocaine crops

All about the numbers

The Petro administration has also continued to target criminal networks that traffic in cocaine through arrests and the seizure of shipments.

In November, Petro announced the Colombian government had made its largest drug bust in a decade, with law enforcement nabbing nearly 14 tonnes of cocaine.

Gloria Miranda was appointed by Petro in 2024 to lead Colombia’s Directorate for the Substitution of Illicit Crops, the agency overseeing the voluntary eradication efforts.

She believes that the Petro administration’s efforts have been mischaracterised as ineffective.

“There’s been a narrative that Colombia isn’t doing anything in the fight against drug trafficking,” she told Al Jazeera.

“But we’ve seized 276,000 kilogrammes [608,500 pounds] of cocaine, destroyed 18,000 laboratories, arrested 164,000 people, and are replacing more than 30,000 hectares [about 74,100 acres] of illicit crops.”

But critics — including Trump — argue Petro’s measures have yet to translate into results. Coca cultivation and cocaine production remain stubbornly at record levels.

According to the latest United Nations figures, coca cultivation rose in Colombia by about 10 percent in 2023. Potential cocaine output also jumped 53 percent to about 2,600 tonnes.

Gloria Miranda stands next to Gustavo Petro at an event
Gloria Miranda, second from right, stands next to President Gustavo Petro at a government event [Catherine Ellis/Al Jazeera]

Petro has questioned the accuracy of those numbers, though. Last week, ahead of Petro’s meeting with Trump, his government announced it would no longer use the United Nations figures, arguing that they rely on an “obscure statistical method”.

Michael Weintraub, the director of the Center for the Study of Security and Drugs (CESED) at the University of the Andes, told Al Jazeera that some of Petro’s pushback is political.

But he added that there is a genuine basis for questioning the UN’s methodology.

“The ‘potential cocaine production’ measure has a lot of baked-in assumptions that make it very difficult to trust,” Weintraub said.

It predicts coca production from selected plots, but yields vary by region and season. The UN itself has admitted there are limitations in its method.

Despite these concerns, coca cultivation in Colombia has trended upward for decades.

Analysts note one overriding factor: demand. Consumption in North America and Europe remains strong, and new markets have emerged in Asia, Africa and South America.

Man City’s Phillips set for Sheffield United loan

Manchester City midfielder Kalvin Phillips is set to complete a loan move to Sheffield United.

Phillips is out of favour at Etihad Stadium and can leave before Monday’s 19:00 GMT transfer deadline.

He has agreed to move to Bramall Lane until the end of the season, with the Championship club working to finalise the deal for the former England international.

The 30-year-old’s one and only appearance this season came in the final seven minutes of City’s Carabao Cup win against Huddersfield in September.

Phillips – who joined Pep Guardiola’s men from boyhood club Leeds United in 2022 in a deal worth £45m – has previously been loaned out to Ipswich Town and West Ham United.

In December 2022, Guardiola slammed the midfielder for returning from the World Cup “overweight” and “not in the right condition to train”.

How did Phillips fall out of favour at Man City?

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Sunderland agree £17.5m deal for winger Angulo

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Sunderland have agreed a deal worth up to £17.5m for Anderlecht and Ecuador winger Nilson Angulo.

The clubs have reached an agreement on a £15m fee plus £2.5m in add-ons for the 22-year-old.

He only recently signed a contract extension with Anderlecht in September 2025, after joining in 2022.

He’s now leaving Belgium after three and a half years with 15 goal contributions this season across 30 appearances.

He made his senior international debut in October 2021 during a friendly against Mexico.

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