Arab Times

Doctors report, Turks deny gas attack

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BEIRUT, Feb 17, (Agencies): Six civilians suffered breathing difficulti­es and other symptoms indicative of poison gas inhalation after an attack launched by Turkey on the Kurdish-controlled enclave of Afrin, local doctors and Syria’s state-run news agency reported Saturday.

Jiwan Mohammed, a doctor at Afrin’s main hospital, said the facility was treating six people who had been poisoned who arrived Friday night from the village of Arandi after it was attacked by Turkish troops. Another doctor, Nouri Qenber, said the victims suffered shortness of breath, vomiting and skin rashes. One of the victims had dilated pupils, he said, quoting one of the rescuers. Both spoke to The Associated Press via messaging service.

State-run news agency SANA and the

Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring group also quoted local doctors in their reports.

The claims could not be independen­tly confirmed, and videos released from the hospital showed people being fitted with oxygen masks who did not otherwise show symptoms of gas attack inhalation such as twitching, foaming at the mouth or vomiting.

SANA on Saturday said Turkey fired several shells containing “toxic substances” on a village in Afrin on Friday night, causing six civilians to suffer suffocatio­n symptoms.

The Turkish military repeated in a weekly statement published Saturday that it does not use internatio­nally “banned ammunition” in its Afrin operation and said, “the Turkish Armed Forces does not keep such ammunition in its inventory.”

The army also said it is careful to not harm civilians and only targets “terrorists” and their positions in the Afrin region.

Turkey and United States on Friday agreed to work together in Syria after weeks of tensions over Ankara’s latest cross-border operation that raised fears of a military confrontat­ion between the two NATO allies.

US Secretary of State Rex Tillerson and his Turkish counterpar­t Mevlut Cavusoglu said after talks in Ankara that the two sides would set up working groups to solve key issues that have bedevilled relations.

They gave few details on how this could be achieved, but indicated that solving a dispute over the control of the flashpoint town of Manbij was a priority.

“We are not going to act alone any longer, not US doing one thing, Turkey doing another,” Tillerson said after the talks.

“We will work together... we have good mechanisms on how we can achieve this,” he added.

Cavusoglu said Turkey and the US agreed on the need to normalise relations.

He said ties were at a “critical phase” and vowed to create “mechanisms” to discuss issues that were causing problems.

A prime task of Tillerson was to allay Turkish anger over US policy in Syria, a dispute which has ignited the biggest crisis in bilateral ties since the 2003 Iraq war.

Washington has warned that Turkey’s operation against the People’s Protection Units (YPG) Kurdish militia in the Afrin region of Syria risked distractin­g from the fight against jihadists.

Tillerson called on Ankara to “show restraint in its operation” while insisting that Turkey and the United States “share the same objectives in Syria”.

Tillerson the day earlier held over three hours of talks with President Recep Tayyip Erdogan, with presidenti­al sources saying the Turkish leader “openly” laid out Turkey’s expectatio­ns and priorities.

In a hugely unusual break from protocol, the only other official present at Tillerson’s meeting with Erdogan at the presidenti­al palace was Cavusoglu who also acted as translator, US sources said.

Gulnur Aybet, senior foreign policy advisor to Erdogan, told AFP that Tillerson showed an “earnestnes­s” that was more receptive to Turkey’s concerns.

“We could clearly see the Americans wanted to make things right and that they were trying very hard,” Aybet added.

Turkey’s operation against the YPG, which Ankara blacklists as a terror group, has pitted Turkish troops against a militia which is closely allied with the US in the battle against Islamic State (IS) group jihadists.

For Ankara, the YPG is a branch of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which is blackliste­d as a terror outfit by the US and the EU.

Erdogan this month raised the stakes by warning US troops to leave Manbij, a YPG-held town east of Afrin, inflaming fears of a clash between the allies. The United States has a military presence in Manbij.

Tillerson said Turkey and the US had to solve the tensions surroundin­g Manbij as a “priority” and the issue would be a focus of the working groups.

The talks will look at the YPG moving out of Manbij further east, beyond the Euphrates River, so that the Turks could then go into Manbij alongside the Americans, said a person with knowledge of the discussion­s, who asked not to be named.

The town was held by IS before they were pushed out by Kurdish militia and Tillerson said it was vital it did not fall into jihadist hands again.

Cavusoglu said the YPG must leave Manbij. “We must be sure that YPG has gone east of the Euphrates,” the Turkish minister said.

The squabble over Syria is, however, just one of a litany of issues burdening Turkey-US relations.

Ties were damaged after the failed coup of 2016 with Turkey stung by a perceived lack of US solidarity and angered by Washington’s refusal to extradite Fethullah Gulen, a Pennsylvan­ia-based cleric accused of ordering the putsch.

Tillerson also urged the release of Turks and Americans who have been caught up in the post-coup crackdown.

Last week, NASA scientist Serkan Golge, a dual national, was jailed for seven-and-a-half years for being a member of Gulen’s movement.

US pastor Andrew Brunson, who ran a church in Izmir, has been held on similar charges since October 2016. Tillerson said the US believed he was “unjustly” detained.

Meanwhile, at least two Turkish staffers of American missions in Turkey have been detained by authoritie­s in the post-coup crackdown.

Tillerson said Washington continued to have “serious concerns” about the detentions and “will continue to engage with our Turkish counterpar­ts to seek a satisfacto­ry resolution to these cases.”

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