At least 32 people have been killed and 90 wounded in two bomb explosions in the Syrian city of Homs, the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said.
The blasts, one from a car bomb and another from a suicide attack, struck the Zahra district in the middle of the city, the Observatory, which monitors the conflict through a network of contacts on the ground, said.
Syria's state news agency SANA reported two car bomb blasts, but gave a lower initial toll of six dead and 37 wounded.
It was the second major attack in the city since a ceasefire deal took effect earlier this month, paving the way for the government to take over the last rebel-controlled area of Homs.
Twin blasts on 12 December, also in Zahra, killed at least 16 people. The so-called Islamic State claimed responsibility for that attack, saying it had detonated a suicide car bomb.
Under the Homs ceasefire deal, at least 700 insurgent fighters and members of their families left the last rebel-controlled area of the city, al Waer district.
The United Nations presided over implementation of the deal.
Meanwhile, buses and ambulances carrying around 450 fighters and civilians evacuated from two besieged areas in Syria have crossed into Turkey and Lebanon, sources at the border crossings said.