The Turkish aggression on Kurdish guerrilla-controlled areas in northeastern Syria has driven more than 60,000 civilians from their homes, while the SDF continues to counter Turkish aggression on areas of its control, where it is engaged in fierce battles, with widespread Arab and international condemnation of Ankara. France has summoned the Turkish ambassador to the country against the backdrop of the Turkish aggression against northern Syria.

The director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights Rami Abdulrahman said that the movement of displacement, which has been going on since Wednesday, was concentrated in the border areas that are under Turkish bombardment and witnessing clashes.

As a result of the aggression since Wednesday, a large displacement movement, and the observatory counted the flight of more than 60 thousand civilians from border areas towards the city of Hasaka in the south and its environs.

An AFP correspondent saw civilians, women, men and children in cars and pickup trucks fleeing towards Hasakah.

"Yesterday was a terrible day," Rizan Mohammed, 33, told AFP as he and his family fled Qamishli overnight.

On the second day of the start of the Turkish military operation in northern Syria, the SDF continues to respond to the Turkish aggression on its areas of control in northeastern Syria, where it is engaged in fierce battles, in light of the intensified Turkish bombing raises the fear of a new humanitarian crisis with the displacement of dozens Thousands of civilians.

The SDF shot down a Turkish army reconnaissance aircraft hovering over the skies of the village of Qasr Dib, in the Derek region.

Turkish special forces pushed deep into Syrian territory east of the Euphrates River on the second day of the attack on Kurdish fighters.

According to the Syrian Observatory, Turkish forces took control of the first village east of the city of Tel Abyad with air and ground cover, and trying to continue progress west of the city. He added that Turkish commandos entered the village of Bir Ashek, located east of the city of Tel Abyad, where troops are stationed inside houses in the village.

Fierce clashes are taking place on several axes in northeastern Syria, concentrated in the areas of Ras al-Ain in the northern Hasaka countryside and Tal Abyad in the northern Raqqa countryside, according to Syrian Democratic Forces and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Turkish planes carried out raids on the area between Ras al-Ain and Tal Abyad, coinciding with heavy artillery shelling, according to the Observatory, which noted that Turkish forces and their Syrian factions managed to make limited field progress.

A media source in the Syrian Democratic Forces told Agence France Presse yesterday that the incursion attempts by Turkish forces and the Syrian factions loyal to them have not stopped from east Ras al-Ain to west of Tal Abyad.

The Turkish Defense Ministry said in a statement that the military operation "continues according to plan successfully," referring to the control of "targets" did not specify.

Ankara's attack, condemned by Damascus and its allies Tehran and Moscow, is aimed at creating a safe zone to return a large portion of Syrian refugees to its territory.

At the request of several European countries, the UN Security Council is holding an emergency closed-door meeting to discuss the Turkish attack, while President Recep Tayyip Erdogan responded to widespread international criticism, threatening Europe by sending 3.6 million Syrian refugees towards its borders.

Several European countries have expressed serious concern about the repercussions of the attack to continue the battle against IS cells, and the possibility that it will contribute to its recovery again as the Kurdish fighters turn to Turkey. Erdogan was fiercely criticized.

But in a speech in Ankara yesterday, the latter addressed his critics, especially Europeans, by saying, "European Union, remember: I say it again. If you try to present our operation as an invasion, we will open the doors and send you 3.6 million immigrants." The Turkish president said that the Turkish army's incursion in northern Syria to confront Kurdish armed groups, aimed at restoring the demographics of the region, and the return of Syrians to their country.

Erdogan announced that the Turkish armed forces had managed to "neutralize" 109 "terrorists" in their military operation against Kurdish-controlled areas in northern Syria.

Western and regional countries have criticized the Turkish aggression.

Iran, a Damascus ally that is leading alongside Russia and Turkey, has called on Ankara to "immediately stop".

Tehran considered that the solution lies in the deployment of Syrian forces in this region, and Russia called for negotiations between the Kurds and Damascus, which was welcomed by the Kurdish self-administration.

Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov said yesterday that his country wants talks between Turkey and the Syrian authorities on the Kurds targeted since Wednesday by a Turkish attack in northern Syria.

In international reactions, diplomatic sources said on Wednesday that Belgium, France, Germany, Poland and the United Kingdom had applied for an emergency closed-door meeting of the Security Council to discuss the Turkish military operation in Syria.

EU President Jean-Claude Juncker called on Turkey to stop its military operation against Kurdish militants in northern Syria, saying Ankara would not pay for the so-called "safe zone" in northern Syria.

In Paris, a French diplomatic source said that the Foreign Ministry summoned yesterday, Turkey's ambassador following the Turkish military operation.

Britain has also called for restraint after the Turkish military incursion into Syria, warning that the move threatens to undermine the fight against militants and could cause human suffering.

In Rome, Italian Foreign Minister Luigi Di Mayo said yesterday that the Turkish operation against Kurdish fighters in Syria was "unacceptable" and called for an immediate cessation of hostilities.

For his part, Jordan demanded an immediate halt to the Turkish attack on Kurdish areas in northeastern Syria, expressing its condemnation of all "aggression" threatening Syrian unity.

Jordanian Foreign Minister Ayman Safadi, in a tweet on «Twitter» «We demand Turkey to stop its attack on Syria immediately, and reject any diminution of the sovereignty of Syria».

He added that «solving the Syrian crisis politically to preserve the unity of Syria, and rid it of terrorism and dangerous, is the way to achieve security for Syria and its neighborhood».

Erdogan threatens Europe after condemning aggression:

“We will open our gates and send 3.6 million Syrian refugees

To Europe ».