Erdogan tells Putin Syrian offensive is causing humanitarian crisis

Erdogan tells Putin Syrian offensive is causing humanitarian crisis

Erdogan tells Putin Syrian offensive is causing humanitarian crisis

Turkey's President Recep Tayyip Erdogan pays his respects at a convoy carrying remains of the Srebrenica genocide victims, in Sarajevo, Bosnia and Herzegovina on July 9, 2019. (REUTERS File Photo)

 

 

ANKARA, August 23 (Reuters): Turkish President Tayyip Erdogan told Russia's Vladimir Putin on Friday that Syrian army attacks in northwest Syria are causing a humanitarian crisis and threaten Turkey's national security, the Turkish presidency said.

 

Syrian troops have encircled rebels and a Turkish military post in northwest Syria in an offensive to reclaim territory and towns they lost early in the war.

 

The military observation post near the town of Morek is one of 12 which Turkey established in northwest Syria under a deal with Moscow and Tehran two years ago to reduce fighting between President Bashar al-Assad's forces and rebels.

 

Turkey has supported some rebel factions in the northwestern Idlib region, while Russia and Iran back Assad.

 

In the phone call, Erdogan told Putin that the Syrian army attacks violated a ceasefire in Idlib and damaged efforts for a solution in Syria, the Turkish presidency said.

 

"The president stated that the regime's ceasefire violations and attacks in Idlib are causing a big humanitarian crisis, that these attacks are damaging the solution process in Syria and pose a serious threat to our country's national security," it said.

 

The recent advances by Assad's forces have put Turkish troops stationed in the region in the firing line and displaced hundreds of thousands of people, threatening Ankara's hopes of preventing a fresh wave of refugees on its southern border.

 

Turkish Foreign Minister Mevlut Cavusoglu called for an immediate end to the fighting but said that Turkish troops were staying put at the Morek observation post out of choice - not necessity.

 

"Nobody can keep our forces and soldiers trapped. We are discussing this issue with Russia and Iran," Cavusoglu told a news conference in Lebanon.

 

"We are there not because we cannot get out, but because we do not want to get out. We are there in accordance with the deal we made with Russia."