Turkey began an operation
inside Syria on 24 August, using tanks and war planes to back opposition
fighters with special forces also providing support.
Islamic State jihadists
have been expelled from the last strip of territory under the group's control
along the Syrian-Turkey border, according to Turkey.
Prime Minister Binali
Yildrim said Turkish forces and Syrian rebels had pushed back "terrorist
organisations".
In a televised speech from
the south-eastern city of Diyarbakir, he said: "From Azaz to Jarabulus,
our 91km border has been completely secured."
It would be a major setback
for IS, which uses the border between the two countries as a key supply line to
bring in foreign fighters, weapons and ammunition.
The group still holds
territory in Syria and Iraq.
The success is likely to
deliver a blow to the Syrian Kurdish YPG, which has been gaining territory in
the north of Syria with support from the US-led coalition against the extremist
group.
Ankara considers the YPG a
"terrorist" group and is concerned its expansion along the border
could lead to the creation of a semi-autonomous Kurdish region.
It comes as Syrian
government troops renewed the siege of rebel-held parts of Aleppo.
Syrian state media said the
army and allied forces had taken control of an area south of the city, severing
the sole route left into eastern neighbourhoods help by opposition fighters.
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