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Turkey captures Daesh suspects on Syria border, says ministry

Turkey captures Daesh suspects on Syria border, says ministry
Turkish-backed Syrian fighters keep position near the town of Tal Hajar in Syria's northern Aleppo province, a few kilometres from areas controlled by a Kurdish-led coalition, on February 1, 2019. (AFP)
Updated 03 February 2019

Turkey captures Daesh suspects on Syria border, says ministry

Turkey captures Daesh suspects on Syria border, says ministry
  • Border units from the Turkish armed forces captured the suspects on Friday
  • Daesh militants are blamed in Turkey for a spate of terror attacks

ISTANBUL: Turkish troops captured four Daesh suspects in a Turkish town on the Syrian border while they were attempting to cross the frontier illegally, the Defense Ministry announced on Saturday.
Border units from the armed forces captured the four “Daesh terrorists” on Friday in the Akcakale district of Sanliurfa in southeast Turkey, the ministry said on its official Twitter account, using an Arabic acronym for Daesh.
One of the suspects, identified as Feride Samur, was being sought with a red notice arrest warrant, the state-run Anadolu news agency reported.
Daesh militants are blamed in Turkey for a spate of terror attacks including a 2015 bombing on a peace rally in the capital Ankara’s train station that claimed 100 lives.
Turkey has boosted security at its border crossings to prevent any infiltrations and allowed a US-led international coalition to launch air raids on the group’s bases in Syria from its soil.

30 children dead
Nearly 30 children have died in eastern Syria over the past two months after making their way out of the last area controlled by the Daesh group, a spokesman for the UN refugee agency said Friday.
Andrej Mahecic of UNHCR said in Geneva that malnourishment and hypothermia have been the principal causes of the 29 children’s deaths. They are among some 10,000 people who have fled the area near the Iraqi border and reached the Al-Hol tent settlement in Hassakeh, raising its population to more than 23,000, Mahecic said.
The evacuations from eastern Syria come during frigid winter weather in the desert region, with mostly women and children fleeing amid the fighting there.
The US-backed Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces have captured wide areas from Daesh in recent months in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor. The extremists are now besieged in a small pocket near Iraq’s border. The fighting that began with an SDF offensive on Sept. 10 has left hundreds dead on both sides. The extremists now control only two villages.
As Daesh loses ground, thousands of people, many of them women and children, are fleeing and most of them are being taken to a tent settlement in the northeastern province of Hassakeh.
Syria’s conflict, which began in March 2011, has impacted children heavily, many of whom have been killed or wounded. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a war monitor, released a death toll for the conflict in December saying that among the half a million people killed over the past seven years, 20,819 were children or teenagers.
Mahecic said the children who have died since early December — including newborns — have died both during their journey and shortly after their arrival. Medical facilities in Hassakeh, where the most critical cases are referred to from the camp, are overstretched caring for acutely malnourished children.
He said UNHCR and partners have set up 24-hour response teams to receive the newly displaced people, quickly identify the most vulnerable cases and provide urgent assistance, especially to unaccompanied or separated children and those who require immediate medical assistance..
Mahecic said UNHCR and humanitarian partners are racing to meet the urgent needs of vulnerable civilians at Al-Hol. He said families fleeing the Daesh-held enclave and surrounding areas have also told UNHCR “of a harrowing journey to safety.”
“They travel at night with barely any belongings, often having to wade through mine fields and open fighting,” he said.
Mahecic added that on reaching SDF positions they describe “being herded into open trucks and having to endure another arduous journey in winter weather northwards to Al-Hol.”
“Little or no assistance is provided en route to the hungry and cold people, the vast majority of whom are women and children,” he said.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a war monitor, said many of those in Al-Hol are Iraqi citizens. It added that the dead children include eight Iraqis killed by fire caused by “primitive” methods used for heating.