Clashes between the Syrian army and rebels at a border post
brought the civil war close to neighbouring Iraq, where
troops fired warning shots into the air.
Insurgents seized control of half of the northeastern Syrian
town of Yaarabiya, including a border post with Iraq, in a
battle with forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad on
Friday and early Saturday, the pro-opposition Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group, said on
Saturday (local time).
The fighting on Iraq's doorstep shows how Syria's
near-two-year conflict could spill over its borders,
threatening to drag in neighbouring countries and further
destabilise the region.
Iraqi troops on the other side of the border from Yaarabiya
fired warning shots, residents, local officials and a Reuters
reporter said.
On Friday, a Scud missile fired from Syrian territory landed
near a village opposite Yaarabiya, causing no damage but
terrifying locals, the mayor of the town of Telefar, near the
Rabia crossing, said.
A Syrian rebel commander told pan-Arab satellite television
channel al-Arabiya the Iraqi army fired across the border at
Syrian rebels following the Scud incident, but residents and
Iraqi military sources denied the report.
Rebel commander Brigadier Selim Idris also told al-Arabiya
some Syrian army soldiers fled into Iraq after rebels took
the crossing, the second post on the Iraq border to fall into
rebel hands.
A medical source from a hospital in Telafar said one corpse
and four wounded had been delivered there, identifying them
as Syrians, probably from the regular army.
SOUND OF EXPLOSIONS
"We have been hearing the sound of explosions and guns in
Yaarabiya for the past three days," said Ali Shibaib, who
lives 300 metres from the border post in Iraq.
"The Syrian regular army troops are stationed between the
Iraqi army and the Free Syrian army," he added.
The Free Syrian Army is the main rebel force.
The conflict in Syria has previously spilled into Iraq. In
September, a five-year-old girl was killed when three rockets
struck a border town in the al Qaim area.
Opposite another Syrian border, Israeli soldiers also found
fragments of mortar shells that fell near an Israeli
settlement in the occupied Golan Heights on Saturday. No
casualties or damage was caused and United Nations observers
were notified, an army spokeswoman said.
Israel seized the Golan from Syria in a 1967 war and later
annexed it.
Iraq's precarious sectarian and ethnic balance has also come
under strain from the conflict next door, where mainly Sunni
Muslim insurgents are fighting to overthrow Assad, who is
backed by Shi'ite Iran.
Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki, a Shi'ite Muslim, says
his government has a policy of non-interference in Syria.
Syria and Iran on Saturday condemned a move by the United
States to give non-lethal aid to rebels fighting to topple
Assad, accusing Washington of double standards.
"I do not understand how the United States can give support
to groups that kill the Syrian people," Syrian Foreign
Minister Walid al-Moualem said at a news conference in Tehran
with Ali Akbar Salehi, Iran's foreign minister.
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