Two Turkish soldiers killed in Syria’s Idlib

By AFP
|
March 20, 2020

ANKARA: Two Turkish soldiers were killed in the rebel-held northwestern Syrian province of Idlib, officials said on Thursday, the country’s first reported casualties since a ceasefire began earlier this month.

A ceasefire was agreed in Idlib -- the last Syrian outpost out of the control of President Bashar al-Assad’s forces -- between rebel-backer Turkey and regime-ally Russia which entered into force on March 6. It has largely held. But Turkey’s ruling party deputy chairman, Mahir Unal, said on Twitter Thursday that a soldier was killed in a "heinous attack" in the Idlib town of Muhambal.

Advertisement

Unal did not say who was responsible for the attack. The governor’s office of the central Turkish province of Sivas tweeted that a 25-year-old soldier from the area was also killed in the Syrian region.

The governorate provided no details on how the soldier was killed or exactly where. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Tuesday that four regime fighters and a rebel were killed in clashes in southern Idlib. Ankara hopes the ceasefire will stem a months-long government assault on the jihadist-dominated region, which is home to some three million people.

Advertisement