Toddler killed after IS rockets hit Turkish town

Toddler killed after IS rockets hit Turkish town
A boy and a woman were killed when militants in an IS-held Syrian town fired rockets at the Turkish town of Kilis on Tuesday, which also injured a six-year-old.
2 min read
08 March, 2016
Rockets fired into the Turkish town of Kilis killed a four-year-old boy [Anadolu]
Eight rockets fired from a Islamic State group-controlled area of Syria hit a Turkish border town on Tuesday, killing two people including a four-year-old child.

Some of the Katyusha-type rockets hit empty areas of the town of Kilis, but caused at least one caused casualties, Turkish media quoted the city's Mayor Hasan Kara as saying.

A woman aged 54 was killed in the strike, while shrapnel hit a passing car in which two children aged six and four were travelling, the state run Anadolu news agency said.

The four-year-old boy later died of his wounds on the way to hospital, it added, while the six-year-old was also wounded.

It is the first such incident since 18 January, when a rocket fired from an IS-controlled position in Syria killed a janitor and wounded a pupil at a school in Kilis.

Television footage showed anxious residents inspecting a crater made by one of the rockets as another missile slammed into the ground nearby.

Mayor Kara urged residents not to panic, CNN-Turk said.

The Dogan news agency said that the rockets had been fired from an area in Syria controlled by IS.


The Turkish army then struck back by firing on IS positions in Syria according to the rules of engagement, it quoted security sources as saying.

Turkey has on occasion been accused by its western allies of not doing enough to combat the threat of IS, which has captured swathes of Iraq and Syria right up to its border.

But Ankara is now playing a key role in the US-led anti-IS coalition and hosting foreign warplanes at its Incirlik airbase for strikes on the group.

The latest attack comes after Turkish armed forces launched repeated artillery strikes in the last two weeks on IS positions in Syria.

A fragile ceasefire backed by Turkey has taken effect in Syria, but the deal does not apply to territory held by the IS group and al-Qaeda affiliate al-Nusra Front.

From mid-February, Turkish artillery had also shelled targets of the Syrian Kurdish Democratic Union Party [PYD] inside Syria, with the military saying it was responding to incoming fire.

But Turkey has not shelled any positions held by Syrian Kurdish fighters inside Syria since the ceasefire was implemented on 27 February.

Washington had urged Ankara to halt its fire on the PYD and its People's Protection Units [YPG] militia.