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Erdogan says Turkish troops inside Syria's Al-Bab

A military honour guard salutes in front of the coffin of one of five Turkish soldiers killed in an attack by IS militants near al-Bab this week
A military honour guard salutes in front of the coffin of one of five Turkish soldiers killed in an attack by IS militants near al-Bab this week

President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has said Turkish troops and their Syrian rebel allies have entered the centre of the so-called Islamic State-held bastion Al-Bab, saying its capture was just a "matter of time".

"Al-Bab is now besieged from all fronts ... Our forces entered the centre" with Syrian rebels, Mr Erdogan told journalists in Istanbul before leaving for a tour of Gulf countries.

Mr Erdogan said it was "only a matter of time" before the allied forces took full control of the flashpoint town.

"Daesh forces have begun leaving Al-Bab completely," he said, using Arabic acronym for IS group.

Turkish forces and allied rebels yesterday entered Al-Bab to drive IS jihadists from the flashpoint northern town, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The Turkish army launched an ambitious campaign inside Syria on 24 August codenamed Euphrates Shield to clean its border from IS jihadists and stop the advance of Kurdish militia. 

Syrian pro-government fighters fire a howitzer gun as they advance towards the area of Al-Bab

But the clashes in Al-Bab have proved the toughest in the campaign, with Turkish military fatalities surging. 

One Turkish soldier was killed and three others wounded in clashes with jihadists earlier, the private Dogan news agency reported, citing military sources.

The latest casualty raised the number of Turkish troops killed in the Syria offensive to 67.

The three injured troops were evacuated from Al-Bab and taken to hospitals in Turkey's Kilis and Gaziantep provinces near the Syrian border, Dogan reported. 

Al-Bab is the jihadist group's last stronghold in the northern province of Aleppo and is also being targeted by regime forces.

Turkey has suggested that it could turn its sights on Raqa after the Al-Bab operation is complete, with Mr Erdogan discussing both Al-Bab and Raqa in a call with US President Donald Trump this week.

Mr Erdogan said Turkey would not stop after Al-Bab, which he said was "not our final target" although he clarified Ankara had no intention to stay in the war-torn country.

"Our final target is to clean the region from Daesh," he said.

"Daesh's main centre is not Al-Bab but Raqa. Once Raqa is cleared, this region will be a terror-free area."

Turkey has repeatedly called for a "safe zone" inside Syria supported by a no-fly zone, which it believes could help to alleviate the burden of accommodating Syrian refugees.

Some 2.7 million Syrian citizens have sought refuge in Turkey from the almost six-year civil war.