The last buses carrying rebel fighters and their families prepared to leave a besieged district of Syria's Homs on Sunday, the provincial governor said, completing a deal to bring the whole city back under government control. Several hundred fighters left on Saturday and Sunday in the final phase of the evacuation of insurgents from Al-Waer, long besieged by government forces and the last opposition-held neighborhood in Homs, an early center of the Syrian uprising. Government forces backed by Russian military police had begun to take control of key parts of the district, a Russian officer told Syrian state TV. Homs Governor Talal Barazi said that in the coming hours "Al-Waer will be empty of all militants and weapons." He said more than 700 rebel fighters would have left by the end of the final phase on Sunday, as well as at least 1,000 other people including their family members. That brought to more than 14,000 the total number of people to leave Al-Waer in several phases since the agreement began to be implemented in March, Barazi said. Among them were some 3,700 rebels, allowed to leave with their light weapons. State television showed rebels milling around, depositing bags and suitcases in front of buses, and holding Kalashnikov assault rifles as armed men from the government side watched the proceedings. Some 1,150 rebel fighters have decided to stay in the district and hand over their weapons under a government amnesty, Barazi said. Syria's government calls the evacuation deals — which have also taken place in besieged areas around Damascus, and in Aleppo at the end of last year — reconciliation agreements. It says they allow services and security to be restored. The opposition has criticized the agreements, however, saying they amount to forced displacement of Assad's opponents away from Syria's main urban centers, often after years of siege and bombardment. The United Nations has criticized both the use of siege tactics which precede such deals and the evacuations themselves as amounting to forcible displacement. Meanwhile, a suicide attack in rebel-controlled Idlib province killed at least five members of a powerful ultraconservative insurgent group. It was not clear who was behind the Sunday attack. Northern Idlib is an opposition stronghold, but an Al-Qaeda-linked group has the most sway there and it is at odds with Ahrar Al-Sham, the powerful ultraconservative group targeted in the attack. Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said at least five Ahrar Al-Sham members were killed in the village of Tal Touqan and expected the death toll to rise. A leading member was killed in the attack, according to the Observatory. Other opposition media platforms, such as Baladi News Network, quoted a witness who said at least 15 were killed in the attack that targeted a group meeting. — Agencies