Syrian rebels who seized Jarablus from Islamic State (ISIS) in a Turkey-backed operation on Wednesday have advanced up to 10 km south of the border town, rebel sources and a group monitoring the war said on Thursday.

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The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said Kurdish-backed forces opposed by Ankara had meanwhile gained up to eight km of ground northwards, apparently seeking to pre-empt advances by the rebels.

The Turkey-supported operation aims to clear ISIS from the Syrian-Turkish frontier in an operation Ankara says is targeting both the jihadists and the Kurdish YPG militia, which is part of a US-backed alliance also fighting Islamic State (ISIS).

One of the rebel sources said the sides clashed at the village of al-Amarna, south of Jarablus, on Wednesday night as the insurgents advancing from the north met Kurdish-backed forces that had moved forwards from the south. The village was under rebel control on Thursday, the rebel source said.

The Observatory said light arms had been used. A map forwarded by a second rebel source showed the Turkey-backed insurgents had advanced into Islamic State-held areas both to the south of Jarablus and to the west along the Turkish frontier. Turkey continued to oversee the operation, the rebel source added.