Cyprus Today

‘Those aiding Kurds will pay heavy price’

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TURKEY warned on Wednesday that pro-Damascus forces would face “serious consequenc­es” for entering Syria’s Afrin region to help Kurdish fighters repel a Turkish offensive.

Their arrival raises the spectre of wider escalation on Syria’s northern battlefron­t, which includes the Syrian army, allied Iran-linked militias, Kurdish forces, rebels, Turkish troops, and Russian and American forces.

The Syrian Kurdish YPG militia said Turkish planes bombed a town in the region and fighting raged on the ground all week. Turkey launched its assault last month to drive out the YPG, which it deems a menace along its border.

More paramilita­ry forces aligned with Syrian President Bashar al-Assad went to Afrin on Wednesday, state media said.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdoğan’s spokesman said shellfire had forced an earlier convoy to retreat.

“Any step by the [Syrian] regime or other elements in this direction will surely have serious consequenc­es,” İbrahim Kalın told a news conference.

A commander in the alliance fighting alongside Damascus in Syria’s seven-year war said that pro-government forces in Afrin had returned fire after rebels backed by Turkey attacked them on Tuesday night.

A new confrontat­ion, pitting the Turkish army directly against pro-Assad forces, would further scramble the web of alliances and rivalries already at play in northern Syria.

Mr Erdoğan has described the pro-government fighters as Shi’ite Muslim militias acting independen­tly and warned they would pay a heavy price.

Mr Kalın said Turkey was not in direct talks with the Syrian government, but its messages to Damascus were being indirectly conveyed.

“The Syrian forces that entered and are still entering will be in the suitable locations to repel the Turkish occupation army,” said Rezan Hedo, a YPG media adviser.

They would deploy near the Turkish border, the YPG has said.

The pro-Assad commander said Russia had intervened to “delay the entry” of Syrian army troops, and so allied “popular forces” with heavy weaponry went instead.

Some Syrian Kurdish officials have said they believed Moscow wanted to keep leverage with Ankara to advance its wider ambitions of brokering a settlement of the conflict.

Turkey and Russia have fought on opposing sides during the seven-year war, with Moscow the key ally of Mr Assad and Ankara one of the main backers of rebels fighting to overthrow him. But Ankara shifted its Syria policy, seeking to mend ties with Russia and turning its firepower against Kurdish forces.

Turkey has in recent months lent support to diplomacy by Russia, whose jets helped Mr Assad’s government seize back most major cities since 2015. Ankara said last month it had sought Moscow’s agreement before the Afrin assault.

“The Russians are the ones who decided this game,” said Kurdish politician Fawza Youssef.

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