Gulf Today

Syrian shelling of rebel-held areas close to Turkey kills 4

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BEIRUT: Syrian government shelling of a rebel-held town near the border with Turkey on Saturday killed four people and wounded more than a dozen, Syrian opposition activists said.

The shelling of the town of Sarmada comes amid increasing tensions in the last rebel stronghold in the Syrian northwest, where a truce reached in March last year has been repeatedly violated in recent weeks.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, an opposition war monitoring group, said three of the dead were local policemen whose station received a direct hit.

It said 17 people were also wounded. The opposition’s Syrian Civil Defence, also known as White Helmets, said the shelling was concentrat­ed on Sarmada and a road linking it with the border crossing point of Bab Al Hawa with Turkey.

The Civil Defence also said four persons were killed but gave a higher number of wounded, 23.

A truce negotiated between Turkey, which supports Syria’s opposition, and Russia, the Syrian government’s main backer, ended a crushing Russian-backed government offensive on northweste­rn Syria in March last year.

In other developmen­ts, a roadside bomb hit a Turkish military convoy on Friday night, killing two soldiers and wounding five on the road leading to Bab Al Hawa, according to Turkish media and the Observator­y.

The Observator­y said the atack was claimed by a group known as Supporters of Abu Bakr Al Siddiq Company, a militant group that has claimed previous atacks on Turkish forces.

The region, consisting of parts of Idlib and Aleppo provinces, is home to about 4 million people, many of them displaced by Syria’s 10year conflict.

The conflict that began in March 2011 killed hundreds of thousands and displaced half the country’s pre-war population of 23 million, including more than 5 million refugees who are now outside the war-torn nation.

Separately, Syria’s government said Israeli troops on Saturday killed a former lawmaker who hailed from the Israeli-occupied Golan Heights.

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