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Turkey Sends More Tanks into Syria after Daesh-Held Town Capture

Turkey Sends More Tanks into Syria after Daesh-Held Town Capture
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Turkey Saturday sent six more tanks into Syria as pro-Ankara forces pressed on with de-mining work in a town captured from Daesh [Arabic acronym for "ISIS" / "ISIL"] this week, an AFP correspondent said.

Turkey Sends More Tanks into Syria after Daesh-Held Town Capture

The Turkish military Wednesday launched an operation codenamed "Euphrates Shield" inside Syria to oust Daesh from the border region and also counter advances by a Kurdish militia detested by Ankara.

An AFP photographer in the village of Karkamis on the Turkish side of the border watched six Turkish tanks roll over the frontier into Syria Saturday.

The Hurriyet daily had reported earlier that the Turkish armed forces had 50 tanks and 380 personnel on the ground in Syria after three days of operations.

Turkish troops are supporting an even larger force of hundreds of Syrian militants.

The photographer said that sporadic explosions were audible on the Turkish side of the border as the rebels carried out de-mining work in the town of Jarabulus seized from Daesh on Wednesday.

The state-run Anadolu news agency confirmed in a story datelined from Jarabulus that the pro-Turkish fighters were working to destroy explosives left behind by Daesh militants.

It said that on Friday alone 20 different sets of explosives had been destroyed.

Turkey's leadership has made clear that the offensive is also aimed at ensuring that the Kurdish People's Protection Units [YPG] group, which has led the fight against Daesh in the area, stay east of the Euphrates River.

Ankara says that the YPG has failed to stick to a promise made by its US allies that the group would move back east across the Euphrates following the seizure of the town of Manbij from Daesh earlier this month.

On Thursday, Turkey shelled positions of the YPG near Manbij but there had been no reports of further activity against the group since then.

Hurriyet said that the Turkish armed forces had been given an order to "strike immediately" should the YPG be seen to make any move towards Jarabulus.

Turkey sees the YPG group and its Democratic Union Party [PYD] political wing, which have links to Kurdish rebels in Turkey, as "terror groups" bent on carving out an autonomous Kurdish region in Syria.

Source: News Agencies, Edited by website team

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