| Syria shoots down Turkish fighter jet |
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| Saturday, 23 June 2012 19:02 |
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Syria yesterday confirmed it had shot down a Turkish fighter jet that had entered its territory, as Turkey said it would take “necessary steps” once it had established all the facts.
This latest crisis will likely further test relations between the two neighbours, already strained over Turkish Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan’s outspoken condemnation of Syria’s bloody crackdown on anti-government protests.
Anti-aircraft batteries had opened fire, hitting the plane as it was one kilometre away from land and it had crashed about 10 kilometres off the coast of Latakia province, in Syrian territorial waters, he added.
A little earlier, Erdogan confirmed in a written statement that Syria had shot down a Turkish fighter jet reported missing over the eastern Mediterranean on Friday.
A spokesman for the UN Secretary-General, Ban Ki-moon, said he was following the situation closely.
The military plane vanished off radar screens around 0900 GMT after it took off from an airbase in Malatya city in Turkey's south-east.
There was confusion earlier on Friday after local media quoted Erdogan as saying that Syria had already apologised over the fighter jet crash and that a search was under way for the pilots.
Later on Friday, however, Erdogan appeared to back off from the comments attributed to him, saying an exact explanation would be issued later, after his emergency meeting with security and defence chiefs.
Syrian activists say the violence has cost more than 15 000 lives.
“If the incident is interpreted as an assault on Turkey, the debate over whether to invoke the Article 5 of Nato treaty could resurface,” Professor Huseyin Bagci told private NTV television.
Bagci was referring to the clause which stipulates that an attack against a member of the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation is considered an attack against all members of the alliance.
Turkey has already considered invoking the Nato article after ricocheting bullets fired on the Syrian side of their common border killed two Syrians on Turkish soil in April. |