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Politics

Missile explodes over northern Cyprus

July 1, 2019

The leaders of the breakaway Turkish-controlled region of Cyprus said an overnight explosion appears to have been Russian in origin. One official said it likely "fell" out of the sky while it was targeting an aircraft.

Turkish soldiers and police guard the area after an explosion pre-dawn, outside of village of Tashkent in Turkish Cypriot breakaway north part of the divided Cyprus, Monday, July 1, 2019.
Image: picture-alliance/AP/P. Karadjias

Northern Cyprus was struck by an object that appears to have been a Russian S-200 missile, Turkish Cypriot Foreign Minister Kudret Ozersay said Monday.

"The first assessment is that a Russian-made missile which was part of the air defense system that took place last night in the face of an air strike against Syria, completed its range and fell into our country after it missed," Ozersay wrote on social media.

Turkish Cypriot Prime Minister Ersin Tatar said nobody was injured in the pre-dawn explosion near the village of Tashkent. People across Cyprus reportedly heard the explosion.

Syria regularly fires air defense missiles during Israeli airstrikes. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based war monitor, said 15 people were killed in an Israeli airstrike overnight near the Syrian capital Damascus and the central Homs province.

Israel has not commented on the reported strike.

Cyprus in the eastern Mediterranean has been divided between ethnic Turks in the north and Greek-Cypriots in the south since a Turkish invasion in 1974. Turkey is the only country that recognizes the government of Northern Cyprus.

amp/jm (AP, Reuters)

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