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Syria border town 'about to fall' as hundreds dead

 

AFP, Mursitpinar, Turkey, October 07, 2014, First Published: 15:12 IST( 7/10/2014 ), Last Updated: 20:55 IST( 7/10/2014 ) – Source – Hindustan Times

 

Jihadists are on the verge of seizing the key Syrian border town of Kobane, Turkey warned on Tuesday after a three-week assault by the Islamic State group that has left hundreds reported dead.

 

The fall of Kobane to IS would mark a major victory for the jihadists, who are fighting for a long stretch of the border with Turkey for their self-proclaimed "Islamic caliphate".

 

At least 412 people, more than half of them jihadists, have been killed in and around Kobane since mid-September, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group.

 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan warned that the strategically important town was "about to fall", saying a ground operation was needed to defeat the militants.

 

"The terror will not be over... unless we cooperate for a ground operation," Erdogan said in a televised speech.

 

With the fight for Kobane entering a crucial phase, Kurdish militia backed by US-led air strikes waged fierce street battles with the advancing jihadists, who pierced the town's defences on Monday.

 

Gunfire, explosions and the roar of fighter jets were heard from the Turkish side of the border, while a Kurdish flag was seen flying in the centre of Kobane, according to an AFP journalist.

 

The IS jihadists "are trying hard to capture the city", said Idris Nahsen, a Kurdish official still in Kobane, also known as Ain al-Arab.

 

"We need help from the international community," Nahsen told AFP by telephone. "Either we finish them (IS) or they will finish us."

 

Kurdish fighters have ordered civilians to evacuate the town, after the jihadists planted their black flags on its eastern side and entered Kobane on Monday.

 

The United States and its allies have launched nearly 2,000 air raids against jihadists in both Iraq and Syria in an attempt to stop their advance, including four strikes in Kobane on Tuesday.

 

In Iraq, at least 17 people were reported killed when a suicide bomber attacked an observation post used by Shiite militiamen watching for IS fighters crossing the Tigris River late Monday.

 

'Fight to last person'

In Syria, the Kurdish fighters are optimistic that their local knowledge of Kobane will compensate for their light weapons, said activist Mustafa Ebdi.

 

"They are fighting to defend their town and they say they will fight to the last person," he said.

 

 Ebdi said the latest US air raids had little effect.

 

"The strikes hit the Mishtenur area," he said, referring to a plateau south of Kobane.

 

"But they (IS) aren't gathered there. There are other places they should be hitting," he said.

 

The battle has prompted some 186,000 residents to flee across the Turkish border.

 

An official in the Turkish town of Suruc said on Tuesday that 700 people, including 47 wounded, had crossed the border from Syria overnight, both civilians and Kurdish fighters.

 

http://www.hindustantimes.com/Images/popup/2014/10/syria.jpg

Turkish army patrols near the Turkish - Syrian border area near the Syrian town of Ain al-Arab, known as Kobane by the Kurds, in the southeastern town of Suruc, Sanliurfa province -  (AFP Photo)

 

Seven bodies were also carried across the frontier.

 

Turkey last week won parliamentary approval for military intervention against IS in Syria and Iraq, but it has yet to announce any firm plans for military action despite the advance of the jihadists to its doorstep.

 

The United States has been backed by Arab and European allies in its military campaign in Iraq and Syria.

 

The Netherlands said its F-16s carried out their first strikes on IS in Iraq on Tuesday, targeting armed vehicles shooting at peshmerga Kurdish fighters.

 

Plea for mercy

IS, an extremist Sunni Muslim organisation, has taken advantage of the chaos unleashed by Syria's several-sided civil war to capture large parts of the country, as well as in neighbouring Iraq.

 

IS has been accused of carrying out widespread atrocities, including mass executions, abductions, torture and forcing women into slavery.

 

In northwestern Syria, meanwhile, a rival extremist organisation to IS -- the Al-Qaeda-affiliated Al-Nusra Front -- abducted a priest and several Christians on Sunday night, the Franciscan mission said on Tuesday.

 

The jihadists had sparked fresh outrage at the weekend with the release of a video showing the beheading of British aid worker Alan Henning.

 

The video -- the latest in a series of on-camera murders of Western hostages -- also included a threat to another hostage, US aid worker Peter Kassig.

 

His parents have issued a video plea for their son's release, urging his captors to show mercy towards the 26-year-old former US soldier who has converted to Islam.

 

Source - http://www.hindustantimes.com/...sthash.q6e6yWng.dpuf

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Turkey’s President Calls for Ground Troops to Fight Islamic State

 

Fall of Syrian Border City of Kobani to the Extremist Group is Imminent, Turkish Leader Says

 

ByAyla Albayrak in Istanbul andAsa Fitch in Beirut, Updated Oct. 7, 2014 11:05 a.m. ET, Source - Wall Street Journal

 

Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Tuesday the besieged Syrian city of Kobani was in imminent danger of falling to Islamic State and called on the U.S.-led coalition fighting the radical group to bolster its air raids with ground operations.

 

The U.S.-led air campaign hit Islamic State positions Tuesday near the Syrian border city of Kobani, known in Arabic as Ayn al-Arab, but officials and Syrian opposition members said the militants were still advancing against Syrian Kurdish fighters.

 

During a visit to a refugee camp in the border province of Gaziantep, Mr. Erdogan declared Kobani was “about to fall” and said the air campaign wasn’t enough.

 

“You can’t end this terrorism just by airstrikes. If you don’t support them on the ground, by cooperating with those who take up a ground operation, the airstrikes won’t do it,” he said.

 

 

Mr. Erdogan reiterate Turkey’s earlier call for a no-fly zone, a parallel safety zone along the border and for Syrian and Iraqi opposition forces to be trained and armed.

 

The U.S. and its Arab and Western partners have conducted hundreds of airstrikes in Iraq and Syria against Islamic State fighters and installations in recent weeks, but the U.S. and other allies have so far ruled out the use of ground forces to counter them.

 

Amid fierce fighting against Kurdish militia defending Kobani, Islamic State fighters pushed into three of the city’s eastern neighborhoods on Monday and hoisted at least two of their black flags.

 

Fighting continued in those districts Tuesday, particularly along an avenue leading to the city center, according to Sheikh Hasan, the defense minister of the Kobani district, one of the main administrative units of the Kurdish enclave known as Rojava.

 

“There were more than 10 airstrikes overnight continuing till the morning, but we can’t assess their damage to the Daesh,” Mr. Hasan said, using the Arabic acronym for Islamic State.

 

Fighting also was taking place in the west of Kobani, said an opponent of the Syrian government who was in contact with city residents.

 

Kobani, a predominantly Kurdish city whose prewar population was 400,000, has become a flash point in the U.S.-led campaign against Islamic State, which has exploited political instability and sectarian tension in Syria and Iraq to capture territory and impose its strict interpretation of Islamic law.

 

If Kobani falls, the security of Kurdish-majority regions that have long enjoyed a de facto autonomy from Iraqi and Syrian governments could be jeopardized. The town’s fate also carries major implications for Turkey, which plays host to its own restive Kurdish population.

 

Kurdish fighters are angling for international military aid, and have criticized the international response to Islamic State threat. Yet aiding local Syrian Kurds who Turkey says have links to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, could pose other complications. Turkey, the U.S. and the European Union all designate the PKK as a terrorist group.

 

But failing to aid the Kurds risks thwarting Turkey’s fragile reconciliation with the PKK, an effort years in the making.

 

The jailed PKK leader Abdullah Ocalan warned last week that the fall of Kobani would bring the peace process to a violent end, accusing the Turkish government of deliberately helping Islamic State against the Kurds to prevent the “revolution in Rojava.”

 

The U.S. is urging Turkey to take a more active role in the fight against Islamic State, and officials are set to meet this week in Turkey to discuss cooperation. Turkey’s parliament last week approved a measure that allows Turkish forces to respond to Islamic State aggression, including by crossing the border into Syria.

 

Hundreds of Turkish Kurds have traveled to Syria to defend Kobani. Meanwhile, the fighting there has led to an exodus of an estimated 180,000 Syrians into Turkey, which is already struggling to cope with some two million refugees from the broader conflict.

 

Smoke rises after an apparent airstrike by allied forces against Islamic State targets to the west of Kobani.

European Pressphoto Agency

 

Source - http://online.wsj.com/articles...e-1412675627?tesla=y

FM
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by RiffRaff:

time for ground troops

Not with my TAX DOLLAR.

Don't you geta tax refund - meaning that instead of you paying taxes you receive a subsidy from taxpayers like me?

Kari
Originally Posted by Kari:
Originally Posted by Nehru:
Originally Posted by RiffRaff:

time for ground troops

Not with my TAX DOLLAR.

Don't you geta tax refund - meaning that instead of you paying taxes you receive a subsidy from taxpayers like me?

You need a good lesson on Taxation.

Nehru

Let's suppose the coalition forces stay away,what then? Would ISIS topple the Syrian Govt? Trade one culprit for the next without endangering the lives of the coalition and other humanity workers.

cain

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