Syria gov’t, SDF trade blame as Aleppo violence resumes

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Security forces and Kurdish fighters have clashed violently in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo.
Security forces and Kurdish fighters have clashed violently in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo.

Fighting in the northern Syrian city of Aleppo has left ‍at least four people dead and several others wounded, state media says, with ​the government and the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces trading blame for the violence.

Tuesday’s ⁠clashes are the latest to break out in the northern city as officials scramble to advance a deal to address Syria’s deepest remaining fracture by merging the US-backed SDF with the central government.

The SDF is reluctant to give ‌up autonomy ​it won during 14 years of war, which left it with ‍control of Islamic State prisons and oil resources in a country that remains fragile little over a year after the ouster of ex-President Bashar al-Assad.

Syria Turkey Kurds
Syrian Democratic Forces and government fighters are trading blame for renewed violence in Aleppo. (AP PHOTO)

Failure to integrate the SDF into Syria’s army risks further violence and could potentially draw ​in Turkey, which has threatened an incursion ‌against Kurdish fighters it views as terrorists.

Three of those killed on Tuesday were civilians, while ​the fourth was an army soldier, state news agency SANA said.

Syria’s defence ‍ministry said in a statement that the SDF had continued its “escalation” by targeting army positions and residential areas in Aleppo.

The SDF denied ​responsibility, ​saying the casualties were caused by “indiscriminate” ​artillery and missile shelling by factions aligned ​with the Damascus government.

The agreement to integrate Kurdish forces was meant to be implemented by the end of 2025 but the two sides have made little progress, each accusing the other of stalling or acting in bad faith.

Syrian government forces and the SDF had agreed to de-escalate after clashes in late ‍December.

Reuters