Turkey
has returned fire after mortar from Syria landed in Turkey’s Hatay province,
Reuters reports. It's the sixth day of retaliation, as Syrian fighting
continues to spill across the border.
The
round from Syria landed 150-200 meters within Turkey's border in the district
of Hacipasa, according to a local official.
The
retaliatory fire comes just two days after Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet
Davutoglu warned that the country would respond forcefully to every Syrian
shell that lands on Turkish soil.
Turkish
soldiers were deployed along the border near Akcakale earlier on Monday.
Some
residents in the town have abandoned their homes and students have been asked
to stay home.
UN
Secretary General Ban Ki-moon has warned of the consequences that the
Syria-Turkey conflict could bring to the region.
“The
escalation of the conflict along the Syrian-Turkish border and the impact of
the crisis on Lebanon are extremely dangerous,” Ban said at the opening of the
World Forum for Democracy in Strasbourg, France.
Just
yesterday, a mortar from Syria hit near a plant belonging to the Turkish Grain
board, several hundred meters from the center of Akcakale.
A short
time later, at least six mortars could be heard fired from Turkey. The mayor of
the town, Abdulhakim Ayhan, confirmed that Turkish artillery immediately had
returned fire.
No
casualties resulted from Sunday’s exchange.
The
crisis between the two countries began on Wednesday, when Syrian mortar shells
killed a woman and four children from the same family in Akcakale. The shells
also wounded at least 13 people. The incident prompted artillery strikes from
neighboring Turkey.
The
recent exchanges of fire have stoked fears that Syria’s conflict will escalate
into regional instability.
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