DAMASCUS, Oct 13 (NNN-SANA) – At least 30 civilians have so far been killed, in northern Syria since Turkey unleashed a military offensive against the Kurdish militias on Wednesday, a war monitor reported.
The civilians were killed as a result of “random” Turkish shelling on several areas in northern Syria, said the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
The Britain-based watchdog group said, the humanitarian situation is worsening, noting that the Turkish assault could lead to a “humanitarian catastrophe.”
Meanwhile, the observatory said, 27 villages have so far fallen to the Turkish forces and their allied Syrian rebels in northern Syria.
It said, the 148 fighters of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), as well as, from the Turkey-backed rebels and Turkish soldiers, have been killed since Wednesday.
The military campaign against the Kurdish forces also led to the displacement of 100,000 civilians, according to the observatory and a recent UN report.
For its side, the Turkish military campaign has been intensified against Syrian areas in the Hasakah province in northeastern Syria and northern Raqqa.
It said that the Turkish forces captured areas after the collapse of the SDF in some parts, in the northern countryside of Hasakah.
The Turkish operation also aims to create a safe zone in northern Syria and resettle millions of Syrian refugees.
It came after the withdrawal of U.S. forces from northern Syria, which was seen as a sign of abandoning the Kurdish forces that used to be Washington’s allies in fighting the Daesh in Syria.
The Syrian Foreign Ministry has issued two statements since the beginning of the Turkish operation, accusing the Turkish side of targeting residential areas and causing deaths among civilians.