Syria claims downing of US drone after take-off from Turkey

Syria claims downing of US drone after take-off from Turkey

DAMASCUS-ANKARA
Syria claims downing of US drone after take-off from Turkey Syria’s military shot down a U.S. drone over the coastal province of Latakia, a stronghold of President Bashar al-Assad, state media said March 17.

Military sources speaking to Hürriyet said that the drone was an unarmed Predator, which took off from the İncirlik base in the southern Turkish province of Adana.
  
If confirmed, this would be the first time Syrian forces have attacked a U.S. aircraft since the coalition fighting the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) began raids against the jihadist group in Syria in September.   
  
Syrian state news agency SANA reporting the downing of a U.S. drone in a breaking news alert on March 17 evening.
  


"Syrian air defences brought down a hostile U.S. surveillance aircraft over north Latakia," it said, without providing further details.
 
 Syria claims downing of US drone after take-off from Turkey 

While Syria is not participating in these strikes, it has so far refrained from taking action against aircraft involved in the coalition’s operations.
  
Damascus has said it was given prior warning before the coalition began the strikes, and Foreign Minister Walid Muallem said last year that Washington had pledged its strikes would not hit the Syrian army.
  
The strikes in Syria have largely been focused on Aleppo and Raqa provinces, where ISIL has strongholds.
  
But the campaign has also targeted the group elsewhere, and hit positions believed to belong to fighters affiliated with Al-Nusra Front, the Syrian wing of Al-Qaeda.
  
ISIL fighters have been largely absent from the northwestern province of Latakia, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor.
  
But Al-Nusra fighters are active in the province, which is home to the Assad family’s ancestral village and is a bastion of the Alawite sect of Shiite Islam to which the president belongs.
  
According to the Observatory, the strikes have killed more than 1,600 people, most of them jihadists.
  
In February, it said it had documented the deaths of 1,465 ISIL members since the raids began in September.
  
Another 73 fighters from Al-Nusra had been killed, the group said.

Six dead in alleged chemical attack

Elsewhere in Syria, activists and the Observatory reported at least six people had been killed in an alleged regime gas attack.
  
The overnight incident in Idlib, in the northwest, prompted outrage from rights group Amnesty International, which said it was further evidence of government "war crimes."
  
"Three children, their mother and father, and their grandmother suffocated to death after regime barrel bomb attacks," the Observatory said.
  
The monitor said doctors in the village of Sarmin, southeast of Idlib city, concluded that the manner of death indicated a gas, possibly chlorine, had emitted from the barrel bombs
  
Activists in Sarmin said chlorine gas had been used, and posted videos of a chaotic field hospital where disoriented victims coughed and held gas masks over their faces as children cried in the background.
  
A paramedic interviewed by an AFP journalist said first responders rushed to the scene unprepared.
  
"This is the first time we’ve experienced a poison gas attack," Motea Jalal said.
  
"We grabbed the masks we had. They are for fires, not for gas attacks, but that’s what is available."
  
He told AFP paramedics retrieved the wounded and tried to wash the chemicals from the bodies, adding that more than 100 people were in need of treatment.
  
The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons said in January it had "confidence" that chlorine gas had been used in attacks on three villages in 2014.
  
It did not assign responsibility, but its report noted that witnesses heard helicopters before the attack, which only government forces possess.