ISIS attack on Kobani comes from Turkey – Kurds
29
November, 2014
An
attack by Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS) jihadists on the Syrian
border town of Kobani has come from Turkish territory for the first
time, a Kurdish official said.
IS
forces advanced from the Turkish territory to attack the border
crossing between Kobani and Turkey, according to Nawaf Khalil, a
spokesman for Syria's prominent Kurdish Democratic Union Party.
The
Islamic State "used
to attack the town from three sides. Today, they are attacking from
four sides,"Khalil
is cited as saying by AP.
The
assault began with an armored vehicle suicide attack on the border
crossing, the UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Heavy fighting also took place southwest of Kobani, where the IS
militants used tanks to reinforce their ground troops.
At
least eight Kurdish fighters and 17 jihadists have been killed in
recent fighting in area, the London-based observatory dded.
Ankara
so far hasn’t commented on the accusations that the Islamic State
launched the assault from the Turkish side of the border.
Since
the siege of the Kurdish town of Kobani began in mid-September,
Turkey has been reluctant to join the battle against the Islamic
State, which even resulted in criticism from Washington.
Ankara
refrains from aiding those defending the border town, due to fears
the increased Kurdish military might boost their ambitions for an
independent state.
The
Kurds have no country of their own, with the Kurdistan region
spanning adjacent parts of Iran, Iraq, Syria, and Turkey.
Turkish
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan also used to back the Islamist rebels
fighting to topple his Syrian counterpart and strategic rival, Bashar
Assad.
Earlier,
in an interview with RT’s Arabic channel, Syrian Foreign Minister
Walid Muallem blamed Ankara for IS forces growing stronger despite
the US-led airstrikes.
“The
Islamic State is getting stronger and stronger day by day… The
reason for that is simple – despite being an ally to the US, Turkey
doesn’t comply with UN Security Council resolutions on blocking
terrorists’ supply channels,” Muallem
said.
“According
to the UN, over 1,000 terrorists from 80 countries are crossing
Turkish-Syrian border crossing in the direction of Syria every
month,” he dded.
And see this report from Deutscher Welle
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