Migrants head to EU border as Turkey seeks NATO help over airstrike

Migrants head to EU border as Turkey seeks NATO help over airstrike

Hundreds of refugees headed to the Greek and Bulgarian borders early on Friday after Turkey said it would no longer impede their passage to Europe and triggered an emergency NATO meeting following a deadly airstrike in Syria, Euronews reports.

At least 33 Turkish soldiers were killed in the airstrike, in Idlib province — the largest death toll for Turkey in a single day since it first intervened in Syria in 2016 against Russia-backed Syrian forces.

Turkey hosts some 3.6 million Syrians and made a deal with the EU to step up efforts to halt the flow of refugees — but President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has repeatedly threatened to “open the gates.”

Omer Celik, spokesman for Erdogan’s AKP, said Turkey was “no longer able to hold refugees” following the Idlib attack.

Greece announced on Friday that it has stepped up its patrols on the border with Turkey, AFP reported. “Everything is under control, there is no reason to worry,” it quoted as Greek source as saying.SPONSORED CONTENTWill extreme wildfires become the norm of tomorrow?Wildfires seem to spark more often and last longer all over the world. If so, what does that mean for people and ecosystems?Ad By Copernicus

Emergency NATO meeting over Idlib airstrike

NATO envoys were holding emergency talks at the request of Turkey. NATO Secretary-General Jens Stoltenberg said the meeting would be held under Article 4 of NATO’s founding treaty, which allows any ally to request consultations if it feels its territorial integrity, political independence or security is threatened.

Apart from providing some aerial surveillance over Syria, NATO plays no direct role in the conflict-torn country, but its members are deeply divided over Turkey’s actions there, and European allies are worried about any new wave of refugees arriving.

Vladimir Putin spoke on the phone to Erdogan spoke on Friday morning and pledged to avoid “such tragedies” in future and said Moscow would do “everything to provide security for Turkish soldiers” deployed to Syria, according to foreign minister Sergei Lavrov.

Erdogan testing NATO patience

Turkey’s invasion of the north of the conflict-torn country — along with the criticism and threats of sanctions brandished by fellow allies at Ankara over the offensive — has come close to sparking a crisis at the military alliance.

France in particular has tried to launch debate on what Turkey’s allies should do if Ankara requests their assistance under Article 5 of the Washington Treaty — which requires all allies to come to the defense of another member under attack — but that discussion has not happened.

The allies are extremely reluctant to be drawn into a conflict of Turkey’s making, and particularly because Erdogan has used up a lot of good will by testing his fellow NATO members’ patience for quite a while.