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Erdogan claims Idlib developments in Turkey's favor

President Tayyip Erdogan said Thursday three more Turkish soldiers had been killed in Syria's Idlib region, where Turkey's military is backing Syrian rebels against government forces, but that developments there were turning in Ankara's favour.

"We have three martyrs, let them rest in peace. But on the other hand, the regime's losses are very big," Erdogan said in a speech. Including the latest three deaths, 21 members of the Turkish forces have been killed in Idlib this month.

Turkish-backed rebels reentered the key northwestern crossroads town of Saraqeb, lost to government forces earlier this month but fierce fighting raged on in its outskirts Thursday, an AFP correspondent reported.

A Russian military source earlier denied that rebels had retaken the strategic town from government forces. Although the rebels' success may be short-lived, it is the first significant setback of the Syrian army's Russian-backed advance into Idlib.

Most recently the Kremlin rebuked Turkish claims that President Vladimir Putin had plans to meet Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan on March 5 to discuss the situation in Syria's Idlib. Erdogan had said such a meeting was likely to happen next week.

The counterattack by rebel fighters and their allies cuts the main Damascus-Aleppo highway, which passes through the town, and reverses one of the principal gains of the devastating offensive the government launched against the country's last major rebel bastion in Idlib province in December.

State news agency SANA acknowledged that there were "fierce clashes" between the army and "terrorist groups on the Saraqeb front".

An AFP correspondent accompanied the rebels into Saraqeb, where he found a ghost town of bombed out buildings deserted by its inhabitants.

The correspondent saw rebel fighters deploy inside the town in large numbers, where they come under attack from government forces on the outskirts as well as from the air.

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that the air strikes were carried out by government ally Russia, which has come under heavy Western criticism for the high civilian death toll from its bombing campaign.

State media accused the "terrorists" of launching car bombings and other suicide attacks against government forces attempting to retake the town which they had held since February 8.

It said that the army had inflicted heavy losses on the attackers, despite the military support it said they had received from neighboring Turkey.

Some 950,0000 civilians have fled the government offensive, raising fears in Ankara of a new mass influx of refugees.

Turkey already hosts the world's largest number of Syrian refugees with around 3.6 million people placing an increasingly unpopular burden on public services.

The Turkish defense ministry said Thursday that two of its soldiers had been killed by government fire in Idlib, taking its losses this month alone to 19.

Turkey, which supports several rebel groups in the Idlib region, immediately responded to the attack by hitting Syrian "regime targets", the ministry said on Twitter.

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan vowed Wednesday that Ankara would not take the "smallest step back" in the standoff with Damascus and Moscow over Idlib.

He warned the Syrian government to "stop its attacks as soon as possible" and to pull back by the end of the month.

Under a deal with Russia intended to bring calm to Idlib, Turkey has 12 observation posts in the region but several have come under fire from Assad forces.

The United Nations has warned repeatedly that the fighting in Idlib has the potential to create the most serious humanitarian crisis since the start of the civil war in 2011.


Agencies

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