New Straits Times

13 dead in car bomb in Syrian border town

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TAL ABYAD: A car bomb killed at least 13 people in a Turkish-held border town in northeast Syria on Saturday, as thousands of Kurds in the wider region protested against “Turkish occupation”.

The bombing ripped through here, one of several once Kurdish-controlled towns seized by Turkey last month in a deadly cross-border offensive.

The blast came despite a truce last week to halt the Turkish assault that began on Oct 9 and sparked the latest humanitari­an disaster of Syria’s eight-year war.

On Saturday, a journalist saw the remains of two motorbikes ablaze in the middle of a rubblestre­wn street.

A group of men carried the severely burnt body of a victim onto the back of a pickup truck, as a veiled young woman stood aghast by the side of the street.

Turkey’s Defence Ministry said 13 civilians were killed in the attack, which it blamed on Kurdish fighters.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, reported 14 people — pro-Ankara fighters and civilians — had been killed in the explosion.

“To displace true owners of the land and to settle Syrian refugees in Turkey to their homes in NE Syria, Turkish army and its proxies are now creating chaos in Til Abyad by explosions targeting civilians,” Mustafa Bali, a spokesman for the Kurdish-led Syrian Defence Forces tweeted.

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

Meanwhile, in the Kurdish-majority city of Qamishli, thousands of Syrian Kurds marched in the streets to protest what they view as a Turkish invasion.

“No to Turkish occupation,” they cried, brandishin­g flags of their once semi-autonomous region and its fighters.

In Berlin, police said around 1,000 people protested to “stop the war” against the Kurds, while hundreds in Paris called for sanctions against Turkey.

The truce deal signed last week between Ankara and Moscow demands Kurdish fighters withdraw from the border.

It hands a 120km-long stretch of border land including Tal Abyad over to Turkey, and provides for joint Russian-Turkish patrols along other parts of the frontier — the first of which started on Friday.

Ankara views Syrian Kurdish fighters as “terrorists”, and wants to expel them from areas along its southern border.

But Turkey also hopes to resettle there some of the 3.6 million Syrian refugees it hosts on its own soil.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? A man retrieving a burning motorcycle at the site of a car bomb explosion in the northern Syrian Kurdish town of Tal Abyad on Saturday.
AFP PIC A man retrieving a burning motorcycle at the site of a car bomb explosion in the northern Syrian Kurdish town of Tal Abyad on Saturday.

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