Turkish air strikes killed eight civilians in Syria’s Kurdish-held northeast, a war monitor and local media said, as Ankara launched operations in Iraq and Syria following deadly attacks on its soldiers.
On Saturday, Turkey announced a new wave of air strikes in retaliation for two separate attacks on its bases in northern Iraq that killed 12 soldiers, which Ankara blamed on Kurdish militants.
Eight civilians were killed in strikes, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, revising an earlier toll of six deaths.
The Britain-based monitor, which has a network of sources inside Syria, said five of the victims were employees of a printing works in the northern city of Qamishli, near the Turkish border. Syrian Kurdish news agency ANHA also reported eight deaths.
The strikes hit more than 20 targets, primarily in the Qamishli area of the semi-autonomous Kurdish administration, the monitor and AFP correspondents in the region said.
Farhad Shani, spokesman for the US-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), said on X, formerly Twitter, that the strikes destroyed “more than 25” civilian facilities and confirmed the death toll of eight civilians.
The SDF spearheaded the battle to dislodge Islamic State group fighters from their last scraps of territory in Syria in 2019.