21 Turkey-backed rebels killed in IS mines in Syria

Syrian regime forces gather at the Kindi Hospital as smoke billows following aistrikes on Aleppo on October 2, 2016. Rebels had held the Kindi hospital since 2013, and capturing it allows government forces to threaten the opposition-held Heluk and Haydariyeh neighbourhoods. / AFP PHOTO / GEORGE OURFALIAN

 

Beirut / AFP

At least 21 Syrian rebels fighting alongside Turkish troops in northern Syria against the IS group were killed by landmines laid by the extremist group, a monitor said on Monday.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the toll was the highest loss of life for forces involved in the Turkish-led operation in northern Syria since it began in late August.
The Britain-based monitor said 21 rebels were killed and dozens more wounded, many seriously, while attempting to secure the village of Turkman Barah, near the flashpoint IS-held town of Dabiq in Aleppo province.
Turkish troops were not mentioned among the casualties.
IS withdrew from the village on Sunday but heavily mined the area before it left, Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said.
The extremist group has regularly laid mines and booby-trapped buildings with explosives as it withdraws under attack.
Abdel Rahman said the toll prompted the rebel forces to redeploy outside Turkman Barah.
Turkey began its unprecedented operation inside Syria, dubbed Operation Euphrates Shield, on August 24.
Ankara says it is targeting IS but also Kurdish fighters from the People’s Protection Units (YPG), which Turkey considers to be a “terrorist” group.
The YPG has been a key ally of the US-led coalition fighting IS and has seized large swathes of territory from the extremist group, raising concerns in Ankara about the creation of a contiguous semi-autonomous Kurdish region along the Syria-Turkey border.
The Turkish operation’s biggest success so far has been the capture of the former IS-held border town of Jarabulus, also in Aleppo province.
The Turkish-backed Syrian rebels have this month pushed towards Dabiq, which holds symbolic importance for IS because of a Sunni prophecy that states it will be the site of an end-of-times battle between Christian forces and Muslims.

IS-claimed suicide blasts kills 2 in Hama
At least two people were killed on Monday in rare suicide blasts in the central Syrian city of Hama, claimed by the IS extremist group.
State news agency SANA, citing a local police source, said two “terrorists” detonated their explosive belts near Assi Square in the city centre about 15 minutes apart.
The attack killed two people and wounded 12 others, Hama governor Ghassan Khalaf told state television.
According to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor, one of the blasts hit a building used by the ruling Baath party.
The IS-affiliated Amaq news agency said “suicide attacks by fighters from the IS using explosive vests” targeted government buildings in the city.
IS holds some territory in northeastern swathes of Hama province, but it is the first time they have claimed an attack in the city, which has remained relatively insulated from the brutal violence of Syria’s five-year war.
Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said that “the regime and its Russian ally are bombing Idlib non-stop” in a bid to choke off the offensive on Hama.

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