A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, March 2, 2020
Two Syrian government jets and Turkish drones downed, as Idlib tensions escalate
Damascus threatens declares airspace closed in northwest Syria, while Turkey expanded its targets well into government territory
Members of Syria's opposition 'National Liberation Front' fire heavy artillery guns at government forces in the village of Talhiyeh in northeastern Idlib province, from another position on 28 February (AFP)
By MEE and agencies-1 March 2020
Two Syrian government planes were targeted by Turkish forces in
northwest Syria on Sunday, while pro-government forces downed three
Turkish drones, Syrian state media said.
Meanwhile, Turkish forces targeted a military airports well
inside Syrian government controlled territory, in a significant
expansion of Ankara's targets.
The situation in Syria’s Idlib region has escalated over the past month,
as Turkey increased its involvement in the fight against government
forces aiming at recapturing the country’s last major rebel-held bastion
in the northwest.
State news agency SANA said Turkish jets attacked two government planes
over Idlib but that the pilots got out in parachutes and were fine,
without giving further details.
SANA earlier denied a Turkish claim that a government warplane has been
shot down in the northwest, adding that the Syrian military has shot
three Turkish drones "so far" that have been used extensively to hit
army locations and air bases.
The first drone was shot down over Saraqeb, a strategic town retaken by rebels last week.
The army also declared the airspace over northwest Syria closed, and
threatened to down any aircraft breaching it, according to SANA.
The move comes a day after the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights reported that drone strikes killed 26 Syrian soldiers in
the area, bringing the number of Syrian forces killed in Turkish
bombardment since Friday to 74.
The activist group on Saturday said 10 Hezbollah fighters and four allied militiamen were also killed.
Turkish forces in the region have been hitting Syrian troops and
positions in Idlib in recent weeks, including with drone strikes.
"Syrian military high command announces the closure of the airspace for
planes and any drone above northwestern Syria and especially above the
Idlib region," state news agency SANA reported a military source as
saying.
"Any aircraft that violates our airspace will be dealt with as enemy
aircraft that must be brought down," it said, citing a military source.
Hours after the warning, Turkey's state-owned Anadolu agency said the
Turkish military had targeted and rendered unusable Nairab airport, west
of Aleppo city.
Rebel commanders also said Kuweires airport, east of Nairab, had been bombed since midnight, according to Reuters.
Idlib province is bracing for a wider escalation after 33 Turkish
soldiers were killed in government air strikes since Thursday. A total
of 55 Turkish soldiers have been killed in government attacks since
February.
Operation Spring Shield
Turkey, meanwhile, said on Sunday that it was pursuing a military operation dubbed "Spring Shield" in northwest Syria.
"Following the heinous attack on 27 February in Idlib, operation 'Spring
Shield' successfully continues," Turkish Defence Minister Hulusi Akar
said in a televised speech.
"We expect Russia to stop the regime's attacks and to use their
influence to ensure the regime withdraws to the borders of the Sochi
agreement."
Erdogan last month gave Damascus a one month deadline to withdraw from
areas with Turkish military presence otherwise Ankara would use military
force to push the regime back.
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said on Saturday he had asked
Russia to stand aside in Syria and let Turkey fight Syrian forces alone.
Akar said Turkish forces had destroyed dozens of tanks, helicopters and
howitzers, adding 2,212 regime troops had been "neutralised".
"Our intention is to stop the regime's massacres, and prevent... migration," Akar said.
Turkey has set up 12 military observation points around the province as
per a de-escalation agreement with Russia in the area, reached as part
of efforts to end the Syrian war that has displaced 13 million Syrians.
Around 3.7 million Syrian refugees are currently residing in Turkey,
which has repeatedly stated that it would not tolerate a further influx
of Syrians to the country.
Turkish officials said on Thursday that Syrian refugees would be allowed free passage to Europe, and then began busing them from Istanbul to the Turkish-Greek borders.
Greek authorities said they have prevented thousands of refugees from
entering the country, with the police on Saturday firing tear gas
towards people who had gathered on the border with Turkey demanding
entry.
On Sunday, Greece placed its borders on maximum security.
At least 500 people arrived by sea on three Greek islands close to the
Turkish coast within a few hours on Sunday morning, police said.
Turkey’s borders to Europe were closed to migrants and refugees under a
2016 agreement in which the EU agreed to provide billions in aid. But
Erdogan complained that funds were arriving too slowly.