LONDON: The Syrian Ministry of Defense accused the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces of launching a surprise attack on the Internal Security Forces and the Syrian Arab Army in Aleppo on Monday.
The clashes erupted in the densely populated neighborhoods of Ashrafiya and Sheikh Maqsoud, which have a Kurdish majority.
The Ministry of Health announced that two civilians were killed and 15 others, including two children, were injured. It condemned the attack on a residential area near Al-Razi Hospital by SDF forces.
Syrian authorities also reported that one member of the Internal Security Forces and another from the army were injured, along with several civil defense personnel.
The Ministry of Defense denied the claims that the army initiated the conflict. It accused the SDF of targeting homes after they suddenly withdrew from jointly operated checkpoints and fired at government forces with heavy machine guns, rocket-propelled grenade shells, and mortars.
Injured civilians were admitted to Al-Razi Hospital in the city, and two Syrian Civil Defense personnel were injured while on duty at the Shihan roundabout, according to the Syrian Arab News Agency.
Fighting has spread to the Syriac Quarter, Sheikh Taha and Al-Jamiliya neighborhoods and to areas between the Shihan and Al-Larmon roundabouts, north of Aleppo, prompting dozens of families to flee their homes toward safer locations in Khalidiya and Nile Street, and closing the main Gaziantep-Aleppo highway. The civil defense accused SDF forces of shooting at one of their vehicles, which carried four members.
Azzam Al-Gharib, the governor of Aleppo, urged citizens to avoid approaching the clash sites or roads leading to the city center until further notice.
On Monday, Hakan Fidan, the Turkish foreign minister, visited Damascus to discuss various topics with his Syrian counterpart, Asaad Al-Shaibani, including the agreement reached in March with the SDF, which outlined a plan to integrate the Kurdish-led group’s military, territory, and natural resources, including oil fields, into the government in Damascus.
Fidan noted that integrating the SDF into the Syrian government would benefit everyone, but mentioned, “It seems they have no intention of implementing the agreement.”
Al-Shaibani emphasized that the agreement with the SDF “reflects Syria’s commitment to unifying its territories.
“We have not seen a serious commitment from them to implement the agreement,” he said, according to SANA.
Recently, the Syrian government proposed a plan to advance the March agreement, and the SDF responded on Sunday, which is currently under review, he added.











