Turkish attack on a village of Til Temir repelled
Til Temir Military Council repelled an attack by the Turkish forces and proxies.
Til Temir Military Council repelled an attack by the Turkish forces and proxies.
Invasion attacks of the Turkish state against Northern and Eastern Syria continue. Trying to take control of the international M4 highway, the Turkish state is carrying out intense attacks on various central locations in the Euphrates and Cizire regions.
The invading Turkish army and allied mercenaries attacked the village of Um al-Kaf in the district of Til Temir (Tal Tamr), northeastern Syria on Sunday.
The attack, which was launched from the village of Qasimiyah, was responded and repelled by fighters of the Til Temir Military Council.
According to the sources of the Council, the fighting has resulted in casualties in the ranks of the occupation forces.
Another attack by the Turkish army targeted the villages of Tewila, Til Tewil and Til Gerabet today afternoon.
The history of Til Temir
The Khabur river extends along the Khabur valley in the northeast of Syria. Here, where the town of Til Temir (Kurdish name: Girê Xurma), a reflection of the population mosaic of Syria, is located, the Nestorians - Assyrians from (Hakkari - who had fled to northern Iraq during the genocide of Christians in the Ottoman Empire between 1914 and 1918, settled in 1933. The League of Nations in Geneva awarded them the settlement area. Their second exodus was preceded by the Simele massacre: some 9000 Assyrians, mainly men and young people, were murdered in various villages in the Duhok region. The village of Simele, which was particularly affected, gave its name to this genocide. There, under the leadership of the Iraqi military, some 350 people died.
The Assyrians from Hakkari founded 33 villages in the flat valley of the Khabur, while Chaldean Christians settled in another three villages. Before the beginning of the Syrian war in 2011, about 20,000 Assyrian Christians were still living here, in almost every village there was a church. Now there are not even 1,000 people left. Because of the jihadists almost all inhabitants fled abroad, most went to Canada, Australia or the US. Some of the villages are completely empty, those who stayed are mostly elderly people. Also, several hundred internally displaced persons from other regions of the country now live in Til Temir.