Turkey won’t let Kurds take control of Syria’s Azaz town

Updated 15 February 2016
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Turkey won’t let Kurds take control of Syria’s Azaz town

ANKARA: Turkey will not allow the Syrian border town of Azaz to fall to Syrian Kurdish fighters, Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said on Monday, warning of a “severe response” if they advance.
“We will not let Azaz fall,” Davutoglu was quoted as saying by private NTV television on his plane en route to Ukraine.
“The YPG (the People’s Protection Units, a Syrian Kurdish militia) will not be able to cross to the west of the Euphrates (river) and east of Afrin,” he added.
Turkey confirmed on Monday that it shelled advancing Kurdish fighters in northern Syria for a third day.
Foreign ministry spokesman Tanju Bilgic said Ankara “retaliated in kind” when an attack from an area under YPG control targeted a border post in Turkey.
“Currently YPG elements were forced out of the Azaz neighborhood. If they come closer to Azaz, they will receive the most severe response,” Davutoglu said.
“The necessary intervention will be made (by Turkey) against the YPG when it is required.”
Meanwhile, airstrikes on Monday destroyed a hospital in northwestern Syria supported by Doctors Without Borders (MSF), killing at least seven people and leaving more missing, the group said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor, said the raids were believed to have been carried out by Russian warplanes.
MSF did not assign blame for the attack, but said another eight people were missing, presumed dead, in the incident.
It said the dead included five patients, a caretaker and a hospital guard, and that the missing eight were all staff members.


Trump plans to announce Gaza funding plan, troops at first Board of Peace meeting, US officials say

Palestinians displaced during the two-year Israeli offensive shelter at a tent camp in Khan Younis in the southern Gaza Strip.
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Trump plans to announce Gaza funding plan, troops at first Board of Peace meeting, US officials say

  • Deployment of the International Stabilization Force is a key part of the next phase of Trump’s Gaza plan, announced ‌in September
  • Delegations from at least 20 countries, including many heads of state, are expected to attend the meeting in Washington, D.C.

WASHINGTON: President Donald Trump will announce a multi-billion dollar reconstruction plan for Gaza and detail plans for a ​UN-authorized stabilization force for the Palestinian enclave at the first formal meeting of his Board of Peace next week, two senior US officials said on Thursday.
Delegations from at least 20 countries, including many heads of state, are expected to attend the meeting in Washington, D.C., which Trump will chair on February 19, the officials told Reuters on condition of anonymity.
The details on Trump’s plans for the first meeting of his Board of Peace for Gaza have not been previously reported.
Trump signed documents in Davos, Switzerland, on January ‌23 establishing the Board ‌of Peace. The board’s creation was endorsed by a ​United ‌Nations ⁠Security Council ​resolution ⁠as part of Trump’s Gaza plan.
While regional Middle East powers, including Turkiye, Egypt, Saudi Arabia and Qatar, as well as major emerging nations such as Indonesia, have joined the board, global powers and traditional Western US allies have been more cautious. Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said on Wednesday during his visit to Washington that Israel has joined the board. Trump has stirred concerns that the Board of Peace might try to resolve other conflicts around the world and compete ⁠with the United Nations. The US officials said the meeting next ‌week will focus solely on Gaza. They said a ‌central part of the meeting will be Trump’s announcement of ​a multi-billion-dollar fund for Gaza, which ‌will include monetary contributions from participating board members. One official called the offers “generous” and said ‌that the United States had not made any explicit requests for donations. “People have come to us offering,” the official said. “The president will make announcements vis a vis the money raised.”
Stabilization force
Deployment of the International Stabilization Force is a key part of the next phase of Trump’s Gaza plan, announced ‌in September. Under the first phase, a fragile ceasefire in the two-year-old war began on October 10 and Hamas has released hostages ⁠while Israel has ⁠freed detained Palestinians.
Trump will announce that several countries plan to provide several thousand troops to the stabilization force that is expected to deploy in Gaza in the months ahead, the officials said.
A primary concern for now is disarming Hamas fighters who have been reluctant to give up their weapons. Under Trump’s Gaza plan, Hamas members who commit to peaceful co-existence and to decommission their weapons will be given amnesty. Members of Hamas who wish to leave Gaza will be provided safe passage to receiving countries, under the plan.
The Board of Peace meetings will also include detailed reports on the work of the National Committee for the Administration of Gaza, which was established to take over the day-to-day civil administration ​of Gaza Strip from Hamas. The committee ​announced its members and held its first meeting in January.
Other updates will cover humanitarian aid for Gaza as well as the Gaza police, the officials said.