Kurdish forces kill two Turkish-backed fighters near Afrin: Monitor

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - At least two Turkish-backed Syrian militants were killed on Friday in clashes with Kurdish forces near the northern Syrian city of Afrin, a war monitor reported. 

Clashes erupted between Turkish-backed militants of the Levant Front and the Kurdish-backed Afrin Liberation Forces (HRE) in the eastern countryside of Aleppo on Friday, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based war monitor. 

The clashes “led to the deaths of two from the Levant Front, and the injury of a number of others,” the monitor said. 

Afrin is a Kurdish city that was taken over by Turkey and Turkish-backed Syrian rebels in a military operation against Kurdish fighters of the People’s Protection Units (YPG) in 2018. Most of the Kurdish population fled and Turkish authorities resettled displaced Arabs from elsewhere in Syria into their vacated homes. 

Turkey considers the YPG – the backbone of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) – as an offshoot of the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), a Kurdish group that has waged an armed insurgency against the Turkish state for decades in the struggle for greater Kurdish rights and designated a terrorist organization by Ankara. 

Syrians rose against the regime of President Bashar al-Assad in 2011, leading to a full-scale civil war that has claimed the lives of hundreds of thousands of people and has left millions more in need of dire humanitarian assistance.