Oman Daily Observer

TURKISH TEAM DISCUSS SYRIA, LIBYA CONFLICTS IN RUSSIA

Turkey is worried about the new migration of civilians from Syria

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ANKARA: A Turkish team was in Russia on Monday for talks on the conflicts in Syria and Libya, following reports that tens of thousands more Syrians were heading to Turkey, which is already host to the world’s biggest refugee population.

President Tayyip Erdogan said on Sunday more than 80,000 civilians in Syria’s northwest Idlib province were migrating towards Turkey, after Russian and Syrian forces intensifie­d their air strikes in the area in recent days.

Turkey-based Humanitari­an Relief Foundation (IHH) said 120,000 Syrians in south Idlib were fleeing towards the border.

The visit to Moscow by the Turkish delegation, led by Deputy Foreign Minister Sedat Onal, was taking place before Russian President Vladimir Putin visits Turkey, a member of the Nato alliance that has angered the United States and other Western allies by buying a Russian missile defence system.

Turkey already hosts about 3.7 million Syrians, the largest refugee population in the world. It worries about a new influx.

“We are putting up every effort with Russia for the attacks to stop, and we will continue to do so. In fact, we are sending a delegation to Moscow,” Erdogan said in his comments on Sunday.

Syrian President Bashar al Assad has vowed to recapture the Idlib region, the last significan­t area of Syria still under rebel control after 8-1/2 years of civil war.

Turkey has backed Syrian rebels fighting Assad, while Russia and

Iran support Assad’s forces. Ankara, Moscow and Tehran have been working on a political solution to the conflict.

The Turkish delegation will also discuss Turkey’s potential troop deployment and military support to Libya, after Ankara and Tripoli signed a military cooperatio­n accord last month.

Russia has said it was concerned about any such deployment.

Erdogan said on Sunday that Turkey could increase military support to Fayez al Serraj’s Unbacked Government of National Accord (GNA), which has been fighting off an offensive by east Libya forces led by Khalifa Haftar. Russia, alongside Egypt have backed Haftar’s forces.

Meanwhile, a war monitor said on Monday that air raids in Syria the previous night, blamed on Israel, killed at least three foreign proregime fighters south of the war-torn country’s capital.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said Sunday night’s attack hit Syrian regime and Iranian positions south of Damascus.

It said three non-syrian loyalist fighters were killed by a rocket blast between the suburb of Aqraba and the nearby Sayyida Zeinab neighbourh­ood.

It did not specify their nationalit­y but said they were likely Iranian.

Syrian state news agency Sana reported the attack just before midnight on Sunday.

It said Syrian air defences fired on “hostile missiles” coming from “the Occupied Territorie­s”, referring to Israel.

It said one missile came down in Aqraba, southeast of Damascus.

Israel has not publicly claimed responsibi­lity for the raids.

An Israeli army spokeswoma­n contacted said Israel does not comment on reports in foreign media.

 ??  ?? Syrian families fleeing the village of Hazano, about 20 kilometres northwest of the city of Idlib, towards the Syrian-turkish border. — AFP
Syrian families fleeing the village of Hazano, about 20 kilometres northwest of the city of Idlib, towards the Syrian-turkish border. — AFP

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