Las Vegas Review-Journal

Refugee killed in northern Syria

Turkish troops, Syrian opposition forces attack Kurdish enclave

- By Lefteris Pitarakis and Sarah El Deeb The Associated Press

HASSA, Turkey — Turkish troops and Syrian opposition forces attacked a Kurdish enclave in northern Syria on Sunday in their bid to oust from the area a U.s.-allied Kurdish militia, which responded with a hail of rockets on Turkish towns killing at least one refugee.

The Turkish offensive on Afrin, codenamed Operation Olive Branch, started Saturday and has heightened tensions in the already complicate­d Syrian conflict, threatenin­g to further strain ties between NATO allies Turkey and the United States.

On Sunday, the United States urged Turkey to exercise restraint and ensure that the offensive is “limited in scope and duration.” A statement by State Department spokeswoma­n Heather Nauert also asked Turkey tobe“scrupulous­toavoidciv­ilian casualties,” adding that all parties involvedin­syriashoul­dfocuson defeating the Islamic State group.

The Syrian government, Iran and Egypt condemned the attack, which activists said has killed at least 18 civilians in the Kurdish-held enclave, Afrin, in the first 24 hours. Turkish officials say 11 rockets launched from Syriahavel­andedintur­kishtowns along the border, killing at least one Syrian refugee and injuring 47.

France called for an emergency U.N. Security Council meeting to discuss the developmen­ts there and urged Turkish authoritie­s “to act with restraint in a context where the humanitari­an situation is deteriorat­inginsever­alregionso­fsyria.”

Turkish officials said the troops entered Afrin a day after dozens of Turkish jets and artillery units at the border pounded Syrian Kurdish targets. A spokesman for the Kurdish fighters said the attack was repelled.

Turkey considers the Syrian Kurdish militia, known as the People’s Protection Units, or YPG, a terror organizati­on and a security threat because of its affiliatio­n with Kurdish rebels fighting in southeaste­rn Turkey.

The group controls Afrin, in Syria’s northweste­rn Aleppo province, as well as nearly 25 percent of Syrian territory, to the east along Turkey’s border.theypgalso­formsthe backbone of the Syrian Democratic Forces, the main U.S. ally against the Islamic State group in Syria.

U.S. support for the Kurdish militia has been a cause of perpetual conflict between Ankara and Washington, which has backed the Kurdish militia.

The operation, for which Turkey has also rallied nearly 10,000 Syrian opposition fighters, could spill into a wider Turkish-kurdish confrontat­ion inside Turkey. There is an estimated 8,000 to 10,000 Kurdish fighters in the Afrin district, the Turkish prime minister said.

 ?? Furkan Arslanoglu ?? The Associated Press Turkey-backed Free Syrian Army fighters shout Sunday in Kirikhan, Turkey, before heading toward the Syrian border.
Furkan Arslanoglu The Associated Press Turkey-backed Free Syrian Army fighters shout Sunday in Kirikhan, Turkey, before heading toward the Syrian border.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States