Two Turkish soldiers were killed Friday in a suicide attack in the former ISIS bastion of Al-Bab, the premier said, hours after a suicide bomber attacked Turkish-backed rebels outside the Syrian town.
"There was a suicide attack which killed two of our soldiers," Binali Yildirim said, indicating they died while checking roads in the town which rebels claimed they had seized from ISIS militants Thursday.
However, the Turkish military said they were killed by a mine in a blast which also wounded three other soldiers.
The soldiers had been checking the area for explosives left behind by ISIS.
Speaking to reporters in Ankara, Yildirim said "the most rigorous cleaning operations" were under way in Al-Bab which he said was "full of bombs and hand-made explosives".
The blast followed an earlier attack that killed 42 people outside a rebel command center in Susian village some eight kilometers (five miles) northeast of Al-Bab, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Al-Bab, which is 25 kilometers (15 miles) south of the Turkish border, was the extremists' last stronghold in the northern province of Aleppo.
Turkey launched its unilateral military operation supporting Syrian opposition fighters last August, targeting ISIS as well as Syrian Kurdish militia.
After a lightning advance, it became mired in a drawn-out conflict in Al-Bab which proved to be the bloodiest fight in Turkey's campaign, where Ankara suffered most of its 71 losses thus far.
Two months after the battle began, the rebels said they had recaptured the town while the remaining extremists still needed to be flushed out.
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