The Arab League called for an immediate cease-fire in northwestern Syria, the group’s secretary-general said Saturday.
“Military escalation in northwestern Syria has formed a model of blatant violation of humanitarian international law and caused an unprecedented humanitarian disaster by displacing more than 1 million Syrians,” Ahmed Aboul Gheit said in a statement.
Gheit said the intervention of regional and international forces in the conflict has worsened the situation. Recent developments have made it difficult to find a peaceful solution to the crisis, he said, and tensions also have negatively affected security and stability in the region.
The statement of the Arab League came after tension escalated in the northwestern region of Syria, especially in Idlib, the last opposition stronghold. Backed by Russia, the Bashar Assad regime, which has vowed to take back control of all territory in the country, has launched an offensive in the de-escalation zone, causing the displacement of hundreds of thousands while killing civilians almost on a daily basis.
Furthermore, at least 34 Turkish soldiers were martyred late Thursday, and several more injured in an airstrike by Assad regime forces in Idlib, just across Turkey’s southern border.
Turkish soldiers are working to protect local civilians under a September 2018 deal with Russia, which prohibits acts of aggression in the Idlib de-escalation zone.
But more than 1,300 civilians have since been killed in attacks by Assad and Russian forces in the zone as the cease-fire continues to be violated.
Thursday’s attack was one in a series since January on Turkish troops, with officials in Ankara keeping a pledge that such assaults would not go unanswered.
The de-escalation zone is currently home to 4 million civilians, including hundreds of thousands of people displaced by regime forces in recent years throughout the war-torn country.
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