Gulf Today

Russian military intervenes to halt clashes in Syrian city

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MOSCOW: Russian military police have been deployed to a city in northeaste­rn Syria to halt clashes between Kurdish forces and Syrian government-allied fighters, a Russian officer said.

Rear Adm. Alexander Karpov, the head of the Russian military’s Reconcilia­tion centre in Syria, said military police backed by helicopter gunships were sent to Qamishli near the border with Turkey.

He said Russian mediation efforts helped halt the shooting in the city and stabilize the situation. Karpov didn’t elaborate on what had caused the tensions or provide further details.

Russia has waged a military campaign in Syria since 2015, helping President Bashar Assad’s government retake control over most of the country ater a devastatin­g 10-year conflict.

Qamishli is mainly controlled by the Kurdish forces, although government troops and allied militias have a security presence near the airport and other neighborho­ods.

Tensions occasional­ly flare between the Kurdish group, dominant in Syria’s northeast, and the central government in Damascus.

The latest clashes in Qamishli erupted a week ago when Syrian government-allied fighters known as the National Defense Forces atacked a position manned by the Kurdish forces in Qamishli, according to Kurdish reports.

The Kurdish forces, known as Asayish, said one of their own was fatally injured in the fighting.

In the intense fighting that followed, the Asayish deployed around Qamishli, taking cover behind walls and firing at the government-allied group in the distance.

The Kurds, Syria’s largest ethnic minority, have carved out a semi-autonomous enclave in Syria’s north since the start of the civil war in 2011. In the area, the dominant Kurdish group, which has allied with the United States to combat Daesh, has developed its own administra­tion and controls most of Syria’s oil resources.

The Kurdish-led administra­tion has been demanding recognitio­n as a semi-autonomous entity, as well as representa­tion in political negotiatio­ns with the Syrian government.

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