The Mercury News

Blast kills 13 in town held by Turkish allies

- By Zeynep Bilginsoy and Bassem Mroue

ISTANBUL » A car bomb exploded in a northern Syrian town along the border with Turkey on Saturday, killing 13 people, Turkey’s Defense Ministry said.

The ministry said about 20 others were wounded when the bomb exploded in central Tal Abyad, which was captured last month by Turkey-backed opposition gunmen from Kurdish-led fighters.

The ministry blamed Syrian Kurdish fighters for the attack, saying it harshly condemns it and called on the internatio­nal community to take a stance against this “cruel terror organizati­on.”

A spokesman for the main Kurdish-led force in Syria, Mustafa Bali, blamed Turkey for the blast, saying Turkey and the Syrian fighters it backs “are now creating chaos” in Tal Abyad to displace the Kurds who live in the town.

“Turkey is responsibl­e for civilian casualties in the region it controls,” Bali tweeted.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity.

Turkey last month invaded northeaste­rn Syria to push out Syrian Kurdish fighters, whom it considers terrorists for their links to a Kurdish insurgency inside Turkey.

Earlier Saturday, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces said Christian fighters will now oversee security in a northern Syrian region that has witnessed fighting between Turkey-backed troops and Kurdish-led militiamen.

The SDF said the deployment will take place in villages close to the town of Tal Tamr in the Khabur river region. That area is home to Syria’s dwindling Christian Syriac and Assyrian communitie­s.

Turkish-backed fighters have been advancing in northern Syria since last month, leading to the displaceme­nt of about 200,000 people. There have been concerns in Christian villages about possible atrocities by those fighters, which include former jihadists.

The SDF said it’s deploying the Syriac Military Council and Assyrian fighters in the Khabur river region. Both groups are part of the SDF.

The announceme­nt came a day after Turkey and Russia launched joint patrols in northeaste­rn Syria, under a deal that halted a Turkish offensive against Syrian Kurdish fighters who were forced to withdraw from the border area following Ankara’s incursion.

Though the truce has mostly held, it has been marred by accusation­s of violations from both sides and occasional clashes. Turkish President Recep

Tayyip Erdogan has threatened to resume the offensive if deemed necessary.

But the U.S. had partnered with the Syrian Kurdish fighters, their top allies in the war against Islamic State. The relationsh­ip has strained ties between Washington and Ankara who are NATO allies.

After an abrupt and widely criticized decision by President Donald Trump to withdraw American troops from this part of Syria, the Kurdish forces approached the Syrian government and Russia for protection. Syrian government troops and Russian military police subsequent­ly moved into areas along the border.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, an opposition war monitor, reported that U.S. troops were setting up a post near the northern border city of Qamishli that is part of the Russia-turkey agreement.

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? A man tries to put out a fire after a car bomb exploded in Tal Abyad, Syria, on Saturday. The blast in the town along the border with Turkey killed over a dozen of people and injured about 20, Turkey’s Defense Ministry said.
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS A man tries to put out a fire after a car bomb exploded in Tal Abyad, Syria, on Saturday. The blast in the town along the border with Turkey killed over a dozen of people and injured about 20, Turkey’s Defense Ministry said.

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