A car bomb in northern Syria killed at least eight civilians and wounded 20 others Sunday in a town near the border with Turkey, Turkey’s Defence Ministry said.

The explosion struck a town south of the city of Tal Abyad, the ministry said. The city was captured last month by Turkish troops and Turkey-backed Syrian opposition forces from Kurdish-led fighters.

The ministry blamed Syrian Kurdish fighters for the attack, accusing them of “massacring innocent civilians.”

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The attack came more than a week after a similar car bomb attack in central Tal Abyad killed 13 people.

Turkey invaded northeastern Syria last month to push out Syrian Kurdish fighters near the border. The military offensive has since displaced around 200,000 people.

Ankara considers the Kurdish-led forces to be terrorists because of their links to Kurdish militants fighting inside Turkey.

The Kurdish groups have called in Syrian government forces to halt Turkey’s advance.

Despite a shaky truce brokered by Russia, Syrian government forces have since clashed with Turkish troops and Turkey-backed opposition fighters.

Syrian government troops fought for a second day with Turkish-led forces in an area between the towns of Tal-Tamr and Ras al-Ayn, according to a war monitor, Syria’s state media and activists. At least four Syrian government soldiers were killed in the fighting on Saturday.

A Turkish drone struck a village north of Tal-Tamr on Sunday, Syria’s state-run Al-Ikhbariya TV said. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory reported intense clashes not far from Russian patrols.

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Russia mediated a ceasefire whereby Syrian government forces deployed along parts of the border but also left Turkey in control of a stretch of land inside Syria.

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