Bangkok Post

SDF forces agree to leave Turkish border

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BEIRUT: The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) said on Sunday it had agreed to withdraw more than 30km from the Turkish border, an announceme­nt welcomed by Damascus which said Turkey should now end its “aggression” in northeast Syria.

Turkey launched its cross-border offensive on Oct 9 targeting Kurdish YPG forces in northeast Syria after President Donald Trump pulled US troops out of the area.

Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan and Russia’s Vladimir Putin then agreed on Oct 22 that Syrian border guards and Russian military police would clear the border area up to 30km into Syria of YPG fighters over a six-day period that ends today.

The YPG is the main component of the SDF and is viewed by Ankara as terrorists due to their links to Kurdish insurgents in southeast Turkey. But the SDF has been a key ally of the United States in the fight against Islamic State militants.

“The SDF is redeployin­g to new positions away from the Turkish-Syrian border across northeast Syria in accordance with the terms of the (ErdoganPut­in) agreement in order to stop the bloodshed and to protect the inhabitant­s of the region from Turkish attacks,” the SDF said in a statement.

It urged Russia to help ensure “a constructi­ve dialogue” between the Kurdish-led administra­tion in northeast Syria and the government of President Bashar al-Assad in Damascus.

Moscow is Mr Assad’s closest ally and Russian military power has proven decisive in helping him turn the tide of Syria’s eight-year civil war and recover large swaths of territory.

The Sochi agreement allows Mr Assad’s forces to return to parts of the northern border with Turkey for the first time in years.

The Damascus government welcomes the SDF withdrawal which removes “the main pretext for flagrant Turkish aggression on (Syrian) territory”, Syrian state news agency SANA said, citing a foreign ministry source.

The government will help citizens to re-integrate, SANA said, paving “the way for ... a return to Syrian national unity”.

Under the Erdogan-Putin agreement, clinched in the Russian Black Sea resort of Sochi, Turkish and Russian forces will start patrolling from Tuesday a section of the Turkish-Syrian border that runs 10km deep into Syria.

On Saturday, Mr Erdogan said Turkey would not hesitate to intervene again to clear YPG forces from the border area if Russia failed to fulfil its obligation­s under the Sochi deal.

SANA reported on Sunday that clashes had taken place between the Syrian army and Turkish forces near to Ras al-Ain, a town in northern Syria on the Turkish border.

Turkey did not immediatel­y confirm the clashes. Separately, the defence ministry in Ankara said one member of Turkey’s military had been killed and five others wounded in the Ras al-Ain area on Sunday after a YPG rocket and mortar attack.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Syrian Democratic Forces fighters take part in the funeral procession of Kurdish fighters in the northeaste­rn Syrian town of Ras al-Ain, Syria last week.
REUTERS Syrian Democratic Forces fighters take part in the funeral procession of Kurdish fighters in the northeaste­rn Syrian town of Ras al-Ain, Syria last week.

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