Thursday, March 28, 2024 | Ramadan 17, 1445 H
broken clouds
weather
OMAN
23°C / 23°C
EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Turkey talking to all sides in Syria conflict for Idlib ceasefire

983111
983111
minus
plus

ISTANBUL/BEIRUT: Turkey said on Friday it was talking to all parties in the Syrian conflict to prevent a government offensive on Idlib ahead of talks between Russian and Turkish leaders, who support rival sides in the looming battle for the rebel-held region.


Ankara failed last week to win agreement for a ceasefire from Russia and Iran, but there has been a recent lull in air strikes and a pro-Damascus source indicated a ground attack may not be imminent.


Rebels also said some pro-government forces had left frontlines in northwest Syria in recent days.


Turkey has reinforced a dozen military posts inside the Idlib region, which lies across its southern border and is controlled by rebels and fighters, trying to forestall a government assault.


Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu said Turkey had also contacted foreign ministers of several countries and was in touch with “all actors in Syria”.


“We are making an effort for a ceasefire in Idlib,” he said, repeating Turkey’s call for targeted operations against militants, including the Tahrir al Sham alliance, instead of an indiscriminate onslaught.


“We are ready to cooperate with everyone to fight terrorist organisations. But killing everyone — civilians, women, children — like this in the name of fighting terrorist organisations is not right and is not humane,” he said on a visit to Pakistan.


The United Nations has warned that an offensive in Idlib could trigger a humanitarian catastrophe in an area where 3 million people live. Turkey, already hosting 3.5 million Syrians, says it cannot take in another wave of refugees.


RUSSIA TALKS: President Tayyip Erdogan will hold talks in Russia on Monday with Vladimir Putin to discuss the Syrian crisis, 10 days after similar talks in Tehran, Turkish and Russian officials said.


Despite the deadlock at the Iran meeting, calm has largely prevailed in northwest Syria this week following a wave of air strikes which killed several dozen people and generated speculation of an imminent ground offensive.


A pro-Assad source in Syria said: “There is patience and repositioning currently. The operation is not cancelled, but we have time.”


A second source, an official in the regional alliance that supports Assad, said there was a “political tug of war” over Idlib, accompanied by air strikes on militants from Tahrir al Sham.


Two rebel sources in the northwest said some government forces have been observed withdrawing from frontlines in the Hama region, which adjoins Idlib, this week.


“It appears that the Russians and the Assad regime have temporarily looked the other way,” said one of the sources, Colonel Mustafa Bakour, a commander in the Jaish al Ezza rebel group. He added that several hundred pro-Assad forces had withdrawn from frontlines in the northern Hama countryside. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said calm mostly prevailed again on Friday.


Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said that Moscow would keep bombing militant targets in Idlib if need be, but would also open humanitarian corridors to allow civilians to flee, the Interfax news agency reported.


Lavrov, who was speaking in Berlin, was cited as saying that the Russian air force would strike what he called terrorist weapons-making facilities as and when it found out about them, but would also encourage local reconciliation deals.


Putin also discussed the situation in Idlib with members of Russia’s Security Council on Friday, telling them he was concerned by militant activity there, the RIA news agency cited the Kremlin as saying.


— Reuters


SHARE ARTICLE
arrow up
home icon