17 Kasım 2014 Pazartesi
Kurdish battle for kobani
In Turkey, thousands marched during the weekend in solidarity with the besieged Syrian city of Kobane. This comes after Ankara - under pressure at home and abroad - allowed heavily-armed Kurdish forces from Iraq to reach the city through Turkey to reinforce defenders there battling against ISIS.
In the video released on Monday Cantlie dismisses reports that IS forces have failed in their assault on the Kurdish town, declaring that they hold the east and south of Kobani and that their victory there is kobane news only a matter of time. On Friday, Kurdish fighters faced three attacks by IS militants in the east and near the centre, said the Britain-based Observatory, which has a wide network of sources inside Syria.
President Recep Tayyip Erdogan has insisted that the fighters of the Democratic Union Party (PYD) leading the battle against IS for Kobane are part of a "terror group" allied to the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) who have fought Turkish security forces in a three decade insurgency for Kurdish self-rule. Kobani and its surrounding areas have been under attack since mid-September, with militants capturing dozens of nearby Kurdish villages.
In that video he said that IS punished anyone that tried to escape by using the torture method known as waterboarding”, in which the victim believes that he is about to drown, as punishment and criticised the kobane news way the US and UK dealt with hostage negotiations. The video then homes in on a point filmed by the drone, naming it, and after it a second point which expands to reveal John Cantlie talking to the camera.
The United States also will lose credibility and stature among Kurds, who in general are the most pro-Western people in the region. U.S. airstrikes came too late and did not have sufficient effect. The US policy toward the Syrian Kurds has been held hostage by NATO ally Turkey, kobane news as Washington must perform a difficult balancing act to get Turkey onboard an anti-ISIL coalition while also heeding Turkey's sensitivities towards the PKK, a recognized terrorist group. Yet Washington's policy approach to the Kurdish people is fraught with inconsistencies.
Protesters clash with police during demonstrations against lack of action by the government towards Islamic State insurgents targeting the Syrian city of Kobane. An injured man covers his forehead while Turkish riot police use water cannons and tear gas to disperse people who were protesting against Turkey's policy in Syria. BREAKING: Kurdish PYD co-leader Asya Abdullah from Kobane told me that they suspect IS might have used chemical weapons against the city.
The Kurdish militias in the region have a formidable reputation. But the YPG in Kobane is on the verge of collapsing under Islamic State's onslaught. Even if his fighters outnumber the jihadists, said Ismet Hesen, the YPG's resident defense chief, they lack the heavy weapons needed to stave off the attack. Did Turkey view this business positively? No it didn't,” President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said of the weapons drop at a press conference Thursday in the Latvian capital, Riga.
Just as striking as the determined organisation and solidarity of Kurds from across Turkey, is the noticeable lack of support from the government and NGOs. Apart from a small government-run refugee camp in the village of Aligor, all the camps are run by the DBP party and Kurdish activists. No NGOs have come here out of fear of angering the government. Kurds, and a handful of other activists who have come to help, are left alone to deal with the crisis.
The Sunni militants want to seize the dams to bolster their claim they are building an actual state; the dams are key to irrigating the country's vast wheat fields and providing Iraqis with electricity. More ominously, the Islamic State has used its control over water facilities - including as many as four dams along the Tigris and Euphrates rivers - to displace communities or deprive them of crucial water supplies.
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