Khabor Wala Desk
Published: 21st September 2025, 11:11 AM
A Syria monitor reported that seven civilians were killed on Saturday in a bombardment by government forces in northern Syria, an area experiencing clashes with the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF).
The victims, including five women and two children, were killed in the village of Umm Tina in the Deir Hafer area of Aleppo province.
The SDF acts as the de facto military force of a semi-autonomous Kurdish administration controlling large areas of north and northeast Syria, including vital oil and gas fields.
After the overthrow of President Bashar al-Assad by Islamist forces last year, the new authorities and the SDF signed a deal in March aimed at integrating Kurdish civil and military institutions into the central government.
The SOHR reported that armed clashes involving drones and heavy weapons erupted after the Syrian army targeted SDF positions in Deir Hafer.
The US-backed, Kurdish-led SDF accused “pro-Turkey factions affiliated with the Damascus government” of carrying out drone strikes and artillery shelling, deliberately targeting civilian homes.
| Incident | Location | Civilian Casualties | Notes |
| Bombardment by Syrian army | Umm Tina, Deir Hafer, Aleppo | 7 (5 women, 2 children) | Periodic clashes along front line |
| Drone and artillery strikes | Deir Hafer | 7 | Attributed to pro-Turkey factions by SDF |
The SDF, supported by the Washington-led coalition, previously played a crucial role in defeating the Islamic State in Syria in 2019.
Government and SDF Relations
Earlier this month, Syria’s interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa stated that negotiations with the SDF were proceeding positively, but implementation of the March deal has stalled.
Humanitarian Concerns
The bombardment highlights the ongoing fragility in northern Syria, where civilians are increasingly caught between government forces and Kurdish militias.
This incident underscores the complexity of Syria’s post-IS landscape, with competing authorities and unresolved political agreements leaving civilians vulnerable.
Comments