BEIRUT: Fighting raged on in Syria on Friday, as a hoped-for cease-fire failed to materialize and Turkey intensified its shelling of Kurdish-led forces.
Further dampening hopes for an end to the conflict, the UN peace envoy admitted a Feb. 25 date for a resumption of stalled peace talks was no longer “realistically” possible.
Key regime backer Russia meanwhile warned that recent comments by President Bashar Assad about retaking all of Syria were out of step with Moscow’s diplomatic efforts.
On the ground, Turkey intensified its nearly week-long shelling of positions in Aleppo province, where it has sought to halt the advance of a Kurdish-led alliance against rebel forces. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor said Ankara’s overnight bombardment was the heaviest since it began targeting the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) on Saturday. Turkey also expanded its fire, the Britain-based monitoring group said, hitting the Kurdish town of Afrin for the first time, where two civilians were killed and 28 wounded.
Ankara has been angered by the SDF’s operation in Aleppo province, where it has seized key territory from rebel forces supported by Turkey.
Ankara considers the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) that dominate the SDF to be an affiliate of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has waged a decades-long insurgency against the Turkish state.
It accuses the YPG and PKK of being behind a bombing that killed 28 people in the Turkish capital on Wednesday night, a claim denied by the Syrian Kurdish group.
Further dampening hopes for an end to the conflict, the UN peace envoy admitted a Feb. 25 date for a resumption of stalled peace talks was no longer “realistically” possible.
Key regime backer Russia meanwhile warned that recent comments by President Bashar Assad about retaking all of Syria were out of step with Moscow’s diplomatic efforts.
On the ground, Turkey intensified its nearly week-long shelling of positions in Aleppo province, where it has sought to halt the advance of a Kurdish-led alliance against rebel forces. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor said Ankara’s overnight bombardment was the heaviest since it began targeting the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) on Saturday. Turkey also expanded its fire, the Britain-based monitoring group said, hitting the Kurdish town of Afrin for the first time, where two civilians were killed and 28 wounded.
Ankara has been angered by the SDF’s operation in Aleppo province, where it has seized key territory from rebel forces supported by Turkey.
Ankara considers the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) that dominate the SDF to be an affiliate of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), which has waged a decades-long insurgency against the Turkish state.
It accuses the YPG and PKK of being behind a bombing that killed 28 people in the Turkish capital on Wednesday night, a claim denied by the Syrian Kurdish group.
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