Turkey launches new strike on Syria
Turkey's military has struck back at Syrian military positions after a shell fired by the neighbouring country landed in a Turkish border area, a Turkish official told AFP.
Turkey retaliated in kind on Monday after the Syrian shell landed in Altinozu district, in southeastern Hatay province, at around 1200 GMT, said the official speaking on condition of anonymity.
"Turkish military retaliates immediately after every single Syrian shell," said the official. "We have anti-aircraft batteries pounding Syrian targets."
Earlier, Hatay provincial governor Celalettin Lekesiz said a total of six Syrian shells had hit the province so far, without any casualties.
It was not immediately clear if the governor's figures included the latest shelling. Monday was the sixth consecutive day of Turkish retaliation.
Shells which killed five civilians on Wednesday at Akcakale in Sanliurfa province sparked Turkish retaliatory fire which has been repeated with every new Syrian shell that lands across the border as Bashar al-Assad's regime battles rebel fighters.
Turkish President Abdullah Gul warned again Monday against a spillover of the Syrian conflict into Turkey.
"Our government is in constant touch with our General Staff in this process," Gul was quoted as saying by Anatolia, the state news agency.
"Whatever is necessary is being done as you already see, and will continue to be done," said the president, without elaborating.
The Turkish parliament on Thursday gave the government the green light to use military force against Syria if necessary.
Also Thursday the UN Security Council on strongly condemned cross-border shelling by Syria and called for restraint between the two neighbours.
Aljazeera News





