Windsor Star

Turks shell Syria after deadly mortar attack

Tension ratchets up between neighbours

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BEIRUT Turkish artillery fired on Syrian targets Wednesday after shelling from Syria struck a border village in Turkey, killing five civilians, sharply escalating tensions between the two neighbours and prompting NATO to convene an emergency meeting.

“Our armed forces at the border region responded to this atrocious attack with artillery fire on points in Syria that were detected with radar, in line with the rules of engagement,” the Turkish government said in a statement from the prime minister’s office.

The artillery fire capped a day that began with four bombs tearing through a government-held district in Syria’s commercial and cultural capital of Aleppo, killing more than 30 people and reducing buildings to rubble.

Along the volatile border, a shell fired from inside Syria landed on a home in the Turkish village of Akcakale, killing a woman, her three daughters and another woman, and wounding at least 10 others, according to Turkish media.

The shelling appeared to come from forces loyal to Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime, which is fighting rebels backed by Turkey in an escalating civil war.

“Turkey, acting within the rules of engagement and internatio­nal laws, will never leave unreciproc­ated such provocatio­ns by the Syrian regime against our national security,” the office of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said in a statement.

Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird condemned Syria’s fatal shelling of the Turkish border town, joining NATO allies in stopping short of advocating a military response.

“Canada strongly condemns, in no uncertain terms, this attack by the Assad regime across Turkey’s border, which killed five people including a six-year-old child,” Baird told a brief news conference in the foyer of the House of Commons Wednesday.

Turkish media said Turkey has prepared a parliament­ary bill for Syria that is similar to one that authorizes the Turkish military to intervene in northern Iraq in pursuit of Kurdish militants who have bases there. The bill is expected to be discussed in parliament on Thursday, Anadolu agency reported.

If approved, the bill could more easily open the way to unilateral action by Turkey’s armed forces inside Syria, without the involvemen­t of its Western and Arab allies.

Secretary of State Hillary Rodham Clinton said the U.S. was “outraged that the Syrians have been shooting across the border,” adding that she would speak with Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu on the matter.

“It’s a very, very dangerous situation,” Clinton said. “And all responsibl­e nations need to band together to persuade the Assad regime to have a ceasefire, quit assaulting their own people and begin the process of a political transition.”

NATO’s National Atlantic Council, which is composed of the alliance’s ambassador­s, held an emergency meeting in Brussels Wednesday night at Turkey’s request to discuss the cross-border incident.

The meeting ended with a statement strongly condemning the attack and saying: “The alliance continues to stand by Turkey and demands the immediate cessation of such aggressive acts against an ally.”

 ?? MANU BRABO/THE Associated Press ?? A Free Syrian Army soldier throws a Molotov cocktail toward Syrian Army positions in Saif Al Dawle district in Aleppo on Wednesday. Three suicide bombers detonated cars packed with explosives in a government-controlled area of the battlegrou­nd city of...
MANU BRABO/THE Associated Press A Free Syrian Army soldier throws a Molotov cocktail toward Syrian Army positions in Saif Al Dawle district in Aleppo on Wednesday. Three suicide bombers detonated cars packed with explosives in a government-controlled area of the battlegrou­nd city of...

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