Turkish Forces Kill 11 YPG Members in Northern Syria

Leading members of SDF were killed in a vehicle targeted by a Turkish drone in Tell Rifaat. (Twitter) 
Leading members of SDF were killed in a vehicle targeted by a Turkish drone in Tell Rifaat. (Twitter) 
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Turkish Forces Kill 11 YPG Members in Northern Syria

Leading members of SDF were killed in a vehicle targeted by a Turkish drone in Tell Rifaat. (Twitter) 
Leading members of SDF were killed in a vehicle targeted by a Turkish drone in Tell Rifaat. (Twitter) 

Turkish intelligence forces have neutralized 11 from the People’s Protection Units (YPG), the largest component of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), in an operation conducted in Manbij, Aleppo’s eastern countryside.

Turkish security sources said Monday that the intelligence members determined the sites from where attacks were launched against the Operation Euphrates Shield area that is controlled by the Turkish forces and the factions known as Ankara-pro Syrian National Army in Aleppo.

The intelligence further determined the locations from where “terrorists” sneak to carry out terrorist attacks in the region.

Anadolu Agency quoted sources as saying that the MIT closely monitored the shelters of terrorists in Manbij and conducted simultaneous operations in cooperation with the Turkish Armed Forces, killing 11 terrorists from the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) and its extensions and destroying a terrorists’ compound.

Türkiye considers the YPG an extension of the Kurdistan Workers' Party in Syria.

Ankara escalated land and aerial shelling in the past three weeks against the sites ruled by SDF and the Syrian army in northern Syria in retaliation for two SDF offensives on a military base in Kaljibrin in Aleppo’s northern countryside ad a police station in Kilis.

The Turkish Ministry of National Defense announced 69 SDF members dead in response to the two offensives.

The escalation mainly focused on Manbij and Tell Rifaat which Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan announced last year as the focus of a new Turkish operation that targets the SDF-ruled locations in order to resume the establishment of safe zones for Syrian refugees.

Erdogan reiterated talks about the military operation months before the presidential and parliamentary elections held in Türkiye in May. Yet it faced objections from the US, Russia, and several parties involved in the Syrian crisis.

The Turkish intelligence eradicated via drones several leaders from the YPG through recent operations in northern Syria.

Moreover, the intelligence revealed on Friday the killing of Abdul Rahman Chadarchi (Jadarji), a member of the PKK, which is designated as a terrorist organization, in an operation conducted in Al-Qamishly.

Meanwhile, Russian Military Police conducted on Monday a one-sided patrol without the Turkish forces in the eastern countryside of Kobani, eastern Aleppo.

A joint patrol was scheduled between the Russian and Turkish forces. However, the Turkish military vehicles did not show up at the border gate near the village of Gharib, 20 km east of Kobani, due to the Eid holiday.

Four Russian military vehicles passed through the scheduled patrol route alone, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Moreover, Russian forces conducted a military patrol comprising four military armored vehicles in the eastern and western countryside of Al-Dirbasiya, where the patrol set off from Al-Qamishly Airport in northern Al-Hasakah countryside and checked military checkpoints where the Syrian army is stationed near the Turkish borders.

The Russian forces continued to conduct one-sided patrols during the past three months which witnessed a Turkish escalation in the SDF and Syrian forces areas.



London to Host International Conference in Mid-April on ‘Peace and Civilian Protection’ in Sudan

A photo taken in January 2024 shows women and children at the Zamzam displacement camp near El Fasher in North Darfur, Sudan (Reuters)
A photo taken in January 2024 shows women and children at the Zamzam displacement camp near El Fasher in North Darfur, Sudan (Reuters)
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London to Host International Conference in Mid-April on ‘Peace and Civilian Protection’ in Sudan

A photo taken in January 2024 shows women and children at the Zamzam displacement camp near El Fasher in North Darfur, Sudan (Reuters)
A photo taken in January 2024 shows women and children at the Zamzam displacement camp near El Fasher in North Darfur, Sudan (Reuters)

Sudanese Foreign Minister Ali Yusuf described the visit of a British diplomatic delegation to the administrative capital, Port Sudan, as “highly significant,” stating that it aimed to consult with the Sudanese government regarding London’s plans to hold an international conference on Sudan in mid-April.

The conference, set to coincide with the second anniversary of the conflict, seeks to coordinate efforts between the two foreign ministries.

In an exclusive statement to Asharq Al-Awsat on Wednesday, Yusuf clarified that the conference will focus solely on humanitarian issues, civilian protection, and peace, with no other objectives.

He added: “The British delegation’s visit is to brief the Sudanese government on the conference’s goals and the invited parties.”

The Sudanese minister welcomed the British initiative as a “positive step,” following a key meeting with British officials in Munich, where bilateral relations and diplomatic engagement between Sudan and the UK were discussed to prevent escalations in international forums. “So far, discussions are progressing well,” he stated.

Yusuf confirmed that communication and meetings between Port Sudan and London are ongoing, saying: “The Sudanese ambassador in London arranged a meeting for me with the British Minister of State for African Affairs, which was highly constructive.”

On Tuesday, Port Sudan received a British diplomatic delegation that included Harriet Matthews, Director General for Africa, the Americas, and the Overseas Territories at the UK Foreign Office; Richard Crowder, the UK Special Envoy to Sudan; Mark Taylor, a political advisor at the British Embassy in Cairo; and the head of the UK Office for Sudan Affairs.

In its first meetings with Sudanese officials, the delegation met with the Governor of Darfur, Minni Arko Minnawi, to discuss the worsening humanitarian conditions for displaced people, particularly in Darfur’s camps.

Minnawi informed the delegation that the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) continue to block roads and prevent aid convoys from reaching those in need. He also criticized the international community’s stance on the situation in Darfur and urged Britain to take a more active role in addressing the crisis affecting the region’s population.

The British delegation is also expected to address Sudan’s accusations against the UK, alleging that it has “abandoned its moral and political responsibility as a permanent member of the UN Security Council, supported war financiers in Sudan, and held secret meetings with RSF leaders—making it complicit in the atrocities being committed.”

In November 2024, Britain, alongside Sierra Leone, submitted a draft resolution to the UN Security Council aimed at strengthening measures to protect civilians in Sudan. The resolution urged both the Sudanese Armed Forces and the RSF to uphold their commitments under the Jeddah Declaration on humanitarian principles. However, Russia vetoed the resolution, arguing that it undermined Sudan’s sovereignty.

In December, Sudanese Deputy Sovereign Council Chairman Malik Agar informed the British envoy of his government’s objections to the UK’s stance on the war, stating that Sudan “is dissatisfied with Britain’s negative and unsupportive position toward the Sudanese people.”