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Turkey says Kurdish YPG militia kill three despite ceasefire deal

November 19, 2019 at 7:42 pm

Members of the Kurdish Peoples’ Protection Units militia (YPG), 28 February 2015 [Kurdishstruggle/Flickr]

Turkey’s defence ministry said on Tuesday Kurdish YPG militia had killed three people and wounded eight in a missile attack on a school in the Tel Abyad region of northern Syria which they were meant to have withdrawn from under a ceasefire agreement, reports Reuters.

The report came a day after Turkey threatened a new military operation in northeast Syria if the area was not cleared of the militia.

A Turkish incursion last month against the Syrian YPG dubbed Operation Peace Spring drew international condemnation. Ankara accuses the YPG, which spearheaded the US-led war against Daesh, of links with Kurdish PKK separatists in Turkey.

READ: Turkey blames Kurdish militia after deadly bombing in Syrian town

“The PKK/YPG who continued their harassments and attacks, and conducted bombings in the Operation Peace Spring area, have now targeted a school in Tel Abyad’s Curn village,” a Turkish defence ministry statement said.

Tel Abyad is one of two major border towns that saw the heaviest fighting when Ankara launched the incursion on October 9.

“Three innocent civilians died and eight civilians, including children, were injured,” the statement said.

Turkey halted its offensive after striking deals with Russia and the United States. While Moscow has said the YPG have withdrawn to at least 30 km (18 miles) from the border, Ankara has been sceptical and held out the possibility of new attacks if members of what it sees as a terrorist group remain.

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu was quoted on Monday as saying his country would launch a new operation if the area was not cleared of YPG militia. Russia said any such move would damage efforts to stabilise the region.

READ: Erdogan says Turkey will not leave Syria until other countries pull out