The Phnom Penh Post

Erdogan calls on Putin to restrain Syria regime in Idlib

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TURKISH President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Friday urged his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin to halt the Syrian regime’s offensive in northwest Syria as France called for an urgent summit with those leaders to end the bloodshed and humanitari­an crisis.

Russian air strikes in the northweste­rn province of Idlib are bolstering a monthslong Syrian government onslaught that has forced nearly one million civilians to flee – the biggest displaceme­nt of the nine-year conflict.

“The president during the call stressed that the regime should be restrained in Idlib and that the humanitari­an crisis must be stopped,” the Turkish presidency said in a statement after the two leaders spoke by phone.

Putin, for his part, told Erdogan that he was “seriously concerned” by the “aggressive actions” of jihadists in Syria’s Idlib region.

In their call, Putin and Erdogan agreed to “intensify bilateral consultati­ons on Idlib to reduce tensions, guarantee a ceasefire and neutralisi­ng the terrorist threat”, the Kremlin said in a statement.

Erdogan told Putin the solution was to return to the Sochi agreement they signed in 2018, which allowed Turkey to establish military posts across Idlib designed to prevent a regime assault.

That deal has been increasing­ly set aside as Syrian forces advance steadily into the region.

Turkey, which backs some rebel groups in the province, has lost 16 military personnel this month in clashes with Syrian troops. It has reinforced its positions and called on President Bashar al-Assad to pull his forces back.

In Brussels, French President Emmanuel Macron on Friday called for a summit on Syria “as soon as possible” with the leaders of Germany, Russia and Turkey.

Speaking on the sidelines of an EU budget summit, Macron said the Syrian offensive “risked provoking a humanitari­an catastroph­e, an escalation of the conflict and a migration crisis”.

In 2015, EU countries split sharply over how to cope with their worst migration crisis since World War II when around a million people, most of them fleeing Syria, entered the bloc.

Turkey meanwhile is determined to prevent a fresh influx of displaced people adding to the 3.6 million Syrian refugees it already hosts.

With Ankara threatenin­g an “imminent” operation against the Syrian regime, Minister of National Defence Hulusi Akar inspected troops gathered at the Syrian border on Friday.

Erdogan spoke of establishi­ng a “safe zone” to provide shelter and support to fleeing civilians facing harsh winter conditions, adding that Turkish organisati­ons were already building structures in the area.

“Our work continues. We will discuss with Putin. I hope we will take a beneficial step with this,” he said.

During their meeting in Berlin on Thursday Merkel and Macron called for a fourway summit on Syria when they spoke by telephone with Putin and Erdogan.

A Kremlin spokesman told reporters on Friday that “the possibilit­y of holding a summit is under discussion”, but that there was still no decision.

Also on Friday, the EU’s 27 leaders condemned Syrian government attacks, saying the offensive was “causing enormous human suffering”.

“The EU urges all parties to the conflict to fully respect their obligation­s under internatio­nal humanitari­an law and internatio­nal human rights law and to allow unimpeded and direct humanitari­an access to all those in need,” they said in a statement.

Syrian aid workers have put out desperate calls for a ceasefire and internatio­nal help.

The UN says 900,000 people – more than half of them children – have been displaced in “horrendous conditions” since December 1, when the latest offensive began.

 ?? AFP ?? Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin to restrain the Syrian regime’s offensive in Idlib.
AFP Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan urged his Russian counterpar­t Vladimir Putin to restrain the Syrian regime’s offensive in Idlib.

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