Turkish
soldiers walk as they stand guard on the Turkish-Syrian border near the
Akcakale border crossing, southern Sanliurfa province, October 5, 2012
The
Turkish military reportedly fired at Syria on Saturday morning in response to
mortars from Syria landing near a Turkish farm. If follows a similar incident
on Friday.
Two
mortar shells landed in rural areas near the village of Guvecci in the early
morning and at midday.
The
exchange occurred near the village of Guvecci in Hatay province according to
Turkey's Anadolu Agency.
“It is
assessed that the shell was fired by Syrian Arab Republic security forces at
opposition forces along the border," the Hatay governor's office said in a
statement on its website said.
Earlier
on Friday afternoon a mortar shell fell near the town of Yayladagi, some 50
meters away from the Syrian border. The Turkish army immediately “fired back at
targets” within Syria, Turkish media report quoting officials.
No
injuries were reported in Turkey from either incident.
At the
same time RT’s correspondent Paula Slier reports that the shelling of Turkish
territory is done from a Syrian region controlled by rebel forces, which
prompts some observers to speculate that the rebels are trying to provoke their
ally Turkey into a military intervention against the government of Bashar
al-Assad.
Meanwhile,
the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported that after hours
of fights rebels had attacked army positions in the Syrian villages of Khirbet
al-Jouz and Darkoush, some 16 kilometers (10 miles) from Guvecci.
The
organization reports 25 soldiers and three rebels were killed.
"After
seizing the village, the rebels raised the revolutionary flag over a former
army checkpoint in the area," AFP quotes the Observatory's chief Rami
Abdul-Rahman as saying.
Turkish
soldiers gesture as they stand guard near the Turkish-Syria border on October
5, 2012 in Akcakale, southern Sanliurfa province. (AFP Photo/Bulent Kilic)
Turkish
soldiers gesture as they stand guard near the Turkish-Syria border on October
5, 2012 in Akcakale, southern Sanliurfa province. (AFP Photo/Bulent Kilic)
‘Attacks
on Turkey fatal mistake’
On
Friday, Turkish Prime Minster Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned Syria that future
attacks on his country’s territory would be a “fatal mistake,” Reuters reports.
“We are
not interested in war, but we're not far from war either. This nation has come
to where it is today having gone through intercontinental wars," Erdogan
said in his speech. "Those who attempt to test Turkey's deterrence, its
decisiveness, its capacity, I say here they are making a fatal mistake."
On
Friday, the US said it supports Turkey, saying that “action is appropriate.”
The
White House spokesman Josh Earnest also said that the United States “condemns
the violence and the aggressive actions of the Syrians.”
Author
and journalist Afshin Rattansi told RT that this kind of flashpoint could
create World War III.
“Turkey
is a NATO member. NATO says it will defend any NATO member. If Turkey continues
like this, Syria might see itself getting increasingly desperate and retaliate
with full force,” he explained. “Then it is up to the US and Britain and
European NATO allies just figure out what to do. What we need urgently right
now is a peace conference. The Arab League have proved themselves useless. The
UN have proved themselves useless. It is up to China and Russia because they
are the only people stopping the full-scale war that will only help forces such
as Al-Qaeda.”
The
exchange of fire between the two countries follows a similar incident on
Wednesday, which left five people dead and eight others wounded.Turkey's
artillery pounded targets inside Syria for twelve hours in retaliation for the
killings.
On
Thursday, Turkey’s parliament also authorized cross-border military operations
into Syria "when necessary."
The UN
Security Council has urged Ankara and Damascus to exercise restraint.
Russia
says it has received assurances from Damascus that Wednesday's strike on Turkey
was a tragic accident. But Erdogan dismissed that pointing out this was not the
first time Syrian mortar rounds had reached Turkey. Previously, bombs had been
hitting non-residential areas, said the PM, so Turkey only filed protests. The
PM stressed that the deaths of two women and three children could not have been
handled the same way.
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