
Syrian government, Kurdish-led SDF trade blame over northern Syria attack
In a statement carried by Syria's official SANA news agency, the ministry said the military was able to repel the attack in the countryside of the city of Manbij.
'The army forces are working to deal with the sources of fire that targeted the civilian villages near the deployment lines,' the ministry said, adding in a later statement that the military was carrying out 'precise strikes'.
But the United States-backed SDF said in a statement that it was responding to 'an unprovoked artillery assault targeting civilian-populated areas with more than ten shells' from factions operating within Syrian government ranks.
The statement made no mention of casualties.
The incident comes after the SDF signed a deal in March with Syria's new interim government to integrate into state institutions.
The SDF has controlled a semi-autonomous region in the northeastern part of the country since 2015, and the deal, if implemented, would bring that territory under the full control of Syria's central government, led by interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa.
Al-Sharaa led the lightning rebel offensive that toppled longtime Syrian President Bashar al-Assad in December last year.
Discussions over the integration of the SDF into the Syrian state had been ongoing since the fall of al-Assad, but were hampered by divides fostered over years of civil war.
The deal reached in March did not specify how the SDF would be merged with the Syrian armed forces.
The SDF has previously said its forces must join as a bloc, while Damascus wants them to join as individuals.
'While we reaffirm our commitment to respecting the current de-escalation arrangements, we call on the relevant authorities in the Syrian government to take responsibility and bring the undisciplined factions under their control,' the SDF said in its statement.
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