Off the wire
Bank of China launches RMB clearing center in Budapest  • China Focus: Rural tourism blooms, villagers benefit  • Venus avenges Serena's US Open loss to reach Wuhan Open final  • 1st LD: Small passenger plane missing in eastern Indonesia  • China Exclusive: Teen violence triggers public concern in China  • Burkina Faso gov't promises "fair" trial for coup plotters  • 2nd LD: Small passenger plane missing in eastern Indonesia  • News Analysis: Japan's economic success does not lie in producing robot-like workers in classrooms  • Weather information for Asia-Pacific cities  • 1st LD Writethru: 14 killed, 39 injured in Nigeria serial blasts: military  
You are here:   Home

Russia denies hitting wrong targets in Syria

Xinhua, October 2, 2015 Adjust font size:

The Russian Defense Ministry Friday denied allegations that Russia's air force failed to target positions of the Islamic State (IS) terrorist group in its airstrikes campaign in war-torn Syria.

"The allegations are complete nonsense and have no factual basis," Defense Ministry spokesman Igor Konashenkov told reporters.

On Thursday, the Turkish Foreign Ministry issued a joint statement with the United States, Germany, Britain, France, Qatar and Saudi Arabia, saying that Russian airstrikes did not target the IS and caused civilian casualties.

Konashenkov said the ministry was monitoring various sources of false information and intended to provide the public with its own reports accompanied by maps and videos twice a day.

Russian air force aircraft, including Su-34, Su-24M and Su-25, carried out 18 sorties against 12 IS targets in Syria over the last 24 hours, the ministry said in a separate statement.

Among others, three command posts, a communications center, two training camps, various bunkers, as well as weapons and fuel depots were destroyed in the air attacks, the statement said.

Su-34 fighter bombers carried out precision strikes from heights of over 5,000 meters, the statement said, adding that this type of aircraft can carry out strikes against terrorist targets in the whole territory of Syria.

"The navigation device on board the aircraft allows hitting any ground targets with absolute precision," it said.

Russia started airstrikes in Syria on Wednesday after the Russian Federation Council, the upper house of parliament, granted President Vladimir Putin the right to send troops following a request by Syrian President Bashar al-Assad.

Over 50 Russian aircraft and combat helicopters have been deployed at Syria's Hmaimin airbase, located close to the port of Latakia. The base is guarded by a battalion of marines and is protected by a group of Russian warships from the sea. Endit