Turkish teen killed as rockets fired from Syria: official

Dunya News

One man was injured as a result and taken to hospital, the correspondent added.

REYHANLI (AFP) - A 17-year-old girl was killed in a Turkish border town on Wednesday by rockets launched from Syria, officials said, as Turkey presses its offensive against a Syrian Kurdish militia.

Ankara began a cross-border operation dubbed "Olive Branch" supporting Syrian rebels with air strikes and ground troops in northern Syria against the People s Protection Units (YPG) militia and its western enclave of Afrin on January 20.

Another individual was also hurt after two rockets hit Reyhanli in Hatay province from northern Syria, the district mayor Huseyin Sanverdi said in a statement.

Turkish Prime Minister Binali Yildirim told a press conference in Ankara that 17-year-old Fatma Avlar was killed in a rocket attack.

According to state-run news agency Anadolu she died after she was taken to hospital.

The agency added that the rockets were launched by the YPG and hit two different houses.

A few hours later, at least one new rocket hit a street in the centre of Reyhanli, not far from where the previous two rockets landed, an AFP correspondent at the scene said.

One man was injured as a result and taken to hospital, the correspondent added.

Ankara views the YPG as a "terrorist" offshoot of the outlawed Kurdistan Workers  Party (PKK), but the militia has been working closely with the United States to recapture swathes of territory in Syria from the Islamic State extremist group.

But the PKK is proscribed as a terror group by Ankara, the US and the European Union.

Multiple rockets have hit the Turkish border provinces of Hatay and Kilis and had already killed at least four people before Wednesday.

A Turk and a Syrian were killed after two rockets hit Kilis on January 24.

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan on Tuesday said the operation would "not stop until we eliminate the terror threat from our border and ensure a secure return for our Turkish brothers to their country".

"The Afrin operation is a security issue for us," Yildirim said.

The Turkish military said earlier on Wednesday that 712 "terror organisation members had been neutralised" since the operation began.