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Erdogan tells Russia to reconsider support for Assad

April 9, 2017 at 8:13 am

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan [Ahmet Dumanlı/Anadolu Agency]

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Saturday asked Russia to reconsider its support for the Syrian regime following a chemical weapons attack in Idlib earlier this week and the US military action in response.

“It is our hope that this will not be limited to the US action,” Erdogan said while speaking about responding to the Khan Shaykhun attack as well as the broader Syrian conflict.

“We hope that Russia gets involved as well — that at least they stop defending [Bashar al-] Assad,” Erdogan said.

Erdogan said he welcomed Moscow’s recent statement that “unconditional support is not possible” to the Syrian regime.

“But let’s speed it up,” Erdogan said. “Let’s get rid of this evil.”

Erdogan said Syria “undoubtedly” has chemical weapons and it is clearly known whose airplanes dropped the bombs on civilians “as we have radar records”.

The president also mentioned Turkish government statements saying that the use of a nerve agent was detected during the treatment of chemical weapons attack victims on the Turkey-Syria border in the presence of World Health Organization (WHO) experts.

He stressed that whether the attack is chemical or not, nearly 1 million victims have been killed in Syria and that the world should act against all kind of civilian casualties, regardless of how they were killed.

The president also emphasised the need to reinvigorate the pursuit of a political solution. “If we say democracy, let’s take this step,” he said.

Erdogan said while there was good progress in the Astana talks — carried out in parallel to the Geneva process — to reach a political agreement in Syria, “unfortunately it did not develop as we wanted.”

On Friday, the US fired 59 Tomahawk missiles at a Syrian airbase American officials believe was used to launch the Khan Shaykhun attack that killed at least 100 men, women, and children and injured more than 500.

It was the most horrific chemical weapons attack in the war-torn country since a similar attack in eastern Damascus in August 2013, WHO said.

The Ghouta attack killed more than 1,300 civilians, mostly women and children, according to local and international human rights groups.