Occupation forces attack a village in Til Temir

Attacks by the Turkish army and its Islamist proxy forces against the autonomous region of northern and eastern Syria continue.

Turkey continues its war of attrition against North and East Syria. Two mortar shells hit a village near Til Temir on Sunday afternoon. Luckily, no one was injured and no property damage has been reported so far, according to the local military council.

The village of Al-Dardara (also Dirdara) affected by the attack is located in the north of Til Temir and is populated by Assyrians. According to information from security forces, the starting point of the bombardment was the illegal occupation zone that Turkey operates along its southern border in alliance with jihadist militias in Rojava. This was the third artillery attack on the village in ten days. In the nearby village of Al-Aboush, five young men were injured in a Turkish bombardment on Sunday.

Largely unnoticed by the Western public, Turkey is waging an open war against northern and eastern Syria, bombing civilian settlement areas, autonomous administration facilities or units of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) on a daily basis. The town of Til Temir, which is located a good 30 kilometres from the Turkish border in the Christian-dominated Khabur Valley, is one of the preferred targets of Turkey and its Islamist proxy troops.

Til Temir and its population have already been in the crosshairs of the aggressors since 2019 as part of a war of attrition, with phases of high intensity alternating with phases of low intensity. Over thirty villages have since been either occupied, depopulated or extensively destroyed. Almost as many villages lie directly on the front line - and thus in the permanent sights of the occupying forces.

The constant incursions by Turkey and its Islamist allies constitute violations of the ceasefire and de-escalation agreements agreed between the guarantor powers Russia and the USA with Turkey after the occupation of Serêkaniyê (Ras al-Ain) and Girê Spî (Tal Abyad) in October 2019. Both Moscow and Washington nevertheless give Turkey a free hand.