Türkiye Kills 11 Kurdish YPG Members on Anniversary of Olive Branch Operation

Caption: Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu met on Friday night with representatives of the Syrian diaspora in New York (Cavusoglu’s Twitter account)
Caption: Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu met on Friday night with representatives of the Syrian diaspora in New York (Cavusoglu’s Twitter account)
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Türkiye Kills 11 Kurdish YPG Members on Anniversary of Olive Branch Operation

Caption: Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu met on Friday night with representatives of the Syrian diaspora in New York (Cavusoglu’s Twitter account)
Caption: Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu met on Friday night with representatives of the Syrian diaspora in New York (Cavusoglu’s Twitter account)

Turkish-Syrian border areas witnessed this week a military escalation, marking the five-year anniversary of Türkiye’s Operation Olive Branch aimed to clear members affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) from the Afrin region.

On Saturday, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Turkish forces and their proxies shelled the vicinity of Abin village in Shirawa district, Maraanaz, Al-Malkiyah and Al-Shawargha in Shiran district in Afrin countryside north western of Aleppo. However, the extent of damage were not reported.

Also, violent clashes with heavy and medium machine guns erupted between members of the Turkish-backed Syrian National Army (SNA) and Syrian regime forces, following an attempt to infiltrate SNA positions on the frontline of Tadef town in Al-Bab countryside, east of Aleppo.

Meanwhile, commemorating the fifth anniversary of the Turkish Olive Branch military operation in Afrin, hundreds of displaced people from the city and from al-Shahba area in the northern countryside of Aleppo held a massive march in Tal Rifaat, chanting slogans denouncing the Turkish presence in the region. The demonstrators also raised pictures of the victims who were killed during the Turkish military operation, which began on January 20, 2018 and lasted 64 days.

According to the Observatory, the Turkish operation led to the displacement of a third of the indigenous inhabitants who sought shelter in refugee camps and almost-complete devastated houses in different Syrian areas, mainly Aleppo countryside.

Turkish forces and their proxy factions in Afrin are accused of seeking to change the demography of the region through housing the families of militiamen in residential villages established by Turkish-backed institutions.

Meanwhile, Turkish forces on Friday said they “neutralized” 11 members of the People's Defense Units (YPG) after the group fired rockets into the Türkiye-Syria border area, the Turkish Defense Ministry said.

“PKK/YPG terrorists carried out a multi-barrel rocket attack from Tel Rifat to the responsibility area of our Oncupinar Border Post. While there was no damage/loss in our units, the terrorist targets were hit strongly within the scope of self-defense,” the ministry said in a written statement.

Any attack by the terrorists will not remain unanswered, it reiterated.

Separately, Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu met on Friday night with representatives of the Syrian diaspora in New York.

In a tweet, the Minister said he reiterated Türkiye’s support to the political process in line with UNSC Res. 2254.

In a joint statement released by Ankara and Washington on the occasion of the Türkiye-US Strategic Mechanism, Cavusoglu and US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said they discussed all aspects of the Syrian crisis and reiterated the commitment of Türkiye and the United States to a Syrian-led political process in accordance with UN Security Council Resolution 2254.

These developments came while protests were held for the third consecutive week in the opposition-controlled areas in northern Syria, rejecting the rapprochement between Ankara and the regime of Syrian President Bashar Assad.

The protesters renewed their refusal to reconcile with the regime and they affirmed their rejection of all plans that aim to support Assad and his regime.



Dozens Killed, Injured in Shelling on Residential Area in Sudan’s El Fasher

Destruction following the shelling in El Fasher, Sudan. (Social media)
Destruction following the shelling in El Fasher, Sudan. (Social media)
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Dozens Killed, Injured in Shelling on Residential Area in Sudan’s El Fasher

Destruction following the shelling in El Fasher, Sudan. (Social media)
Destruction following the shelling in El Fasher, Sudan. (Social media)

Artillery shelling renewed on Tuesday in El Fasher, the capital of North Darfur in western Sudan, targeting hospitals, displacement camps, and residential areas, local sources reported.

The attack resulted in several civilian casualties and dozens of injuries.

Earlier in the morning, Sudanese army warplanes carried out an airstrike on positions held by the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) in the city’s eastern neighborhoods.

The “El Fasher Resistance Committees Coordination” stated on Facebook that the city also came under artillery fire from the RSF. Preliminary reports said at least two people were killed and dozens wounded.

The escalation comes after more than two weeks of reduced fighting between the army, its allied armed groups, and the RSF.

Residents of El Fasher told Asharq Al-Awsat that more people are fleeing the city due to indiscriminate shelling and a blockade that has caused prices to soar and shut down medical services.

The city faces severe shortages of drinking water and food, forcing thousands to seek safer areas.

Sources reported that large military reinforcements have arrived to support the joint forces defending El Fasher against RSF attempts to capture the city and take control of the western region.

In recent weeks, the RSF advanced into the city during heavy fighting and dug defensive trenches near the army's 6th Infantry Division headquarters.

The RSF claimed on X that more than 30 civilians were killed and dozens injured in an army airstrike on a town east of El Fasher.

Official figures show that more than 800 civilians have been killed or injured in El Fasher, which has been engulfed in the conflict between the army and RSF for four months.

The war in Sudan has led to the worst food crisis in the country’s history, with over half of the population suffering from severe hunger.

Millions are facing emergency levels of food insecurity, and over 755,000 people are in catastrophic conditions in Greater Darfur, South and North Kordofan, Blue Nile, Gezira, and Khartoum.

According to the United Nations and humanitarian partners, more than 188,000 people have been killed and over 33,000 injured since the conflict began in April 2023.

Over 10 million people have been displaced, including more than 5 million children, with over 2 million seeking refuge in neighboring countries.