Rescue team find Syrian plane crash pilot

File photo: Syrian state television quoted an army source on Saturday saying the air force had lost contact with a fighter jet on a mission near the Turkish border. Picture: Xinhua

File photo: Syrian state television quoted an army source on Saturday saying the air force had lost contact with a fighter jet on a mission near the Turkish border. Picture: Xinhua

Published Mar 5, 2017

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Istanbul - A Syrian air force pilot who

bailed out as his warplane crashed on Turkish territory has been

found by a Turkish rescue team and is being treated at a

hospital in the Hatay region, a hospital spokeswoman said on

Sunday.

Dogan news agency said the pilot, who crashed his plane on

Sunday, had been found around 40km (25 miles) from the

wreckage. He was first taken to a gendarmerie base and then to

hospital.

The hospital spokeswoman gave no details of his condition.

Syrian state television quoted an army source on Saturday

saying the air force had lost contact with a fighter jet on a

mission near the Turkish border. It gave no details.

It was unclear why the aircraft had crashed, whether it had

been attacked or suffered technical failure.

Combat operations by many militia and government forces come

close to Turkey's long frontier with Syria.

Turkey has been one of the foremost critics of Syrian

President Bashar al-Assad, and supports rebels fighting him in

the country's six-year-old war. It currently has armed forces

involved in operations along the Syrian side of the frontier.

Syrian state media said on Saturday its forces had been

expanding control over former Islamic State-held villages in

northwest Syria, an area close to Turkey's Hatay region where

the aircraft crashed.

The army's gains follow a push to the south and east of the

city of al-Bab, which was captured by Turkish-backed rebels late

last month.

Reuters

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