Turkish Kurds and refugees from fighting in Syria have clashed with Turkish security forces on the border between the two countries.
4 October 2014
Last updated at 14:07 ET
Kurds clash with Turkish security forces on Syria border
The BBC's Paul Adams says there is a sense of a "gradual squeezing" of the area by IS
Turkish
Kurds and refugees from fighting in Syria have clashed with Turkish
security forces on the border between the two countries.
Troops used tear gas and water cannon to disperse protesters
angry at the situation in Syria, where IS militants are closing in on
the town of Kobane.Meanwhile unconfirmed reports say at least 35 militants were killed in US-led air strikes over northern Syria. They come amid a Turkish-US row over alleged support for Syrian militants. On Friday US Vice-President Joe Biden criticised Turkey and US allies in the Arab world for supporting Sunni militant groups such as Islamic State, prompting a sharp response from Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan. "If Mr Biden used such language, that would make him a man of the past for me," he told a news conference in Istanbul. "No-one can accuse Turkey of having supported any terrorist organisation in Syria, including IS." Meanwhile in northern Iraq, Kurdish Peshmerga fighters and Shia militiamen have driven back IS fighters from a strategically important bridge they were holding near the city of Kirkuk. Kurdish troops used Iranian-supplied rockets to attack IS positions in areas with a mainly Sunni population. Advancing Kurdish forces said their opponents were using the tactics of guerrilla warfare, using snipers, booby-trapped homes and laying scores of roadside bombs. Turkish pledge Tensions flared on the Turkish-Syrian border as Kurdish refugees from Syria and Turkish Kurds were chased by soldiers from a rocky hill on the Turkish side where they were watching the siege of Kobane. The demonstrators were expressing their support for Kurdish fighters in Syria trying to stop the IS advance. They are also angry and disappointed at Turkey's perceived inaction over IS in recent months, as well as its refusal to allow them to cross into Syria to fight. More than 160,000 Syrians, mainly Kurds, have fled across the border since IS launched an offensive to capture Kobane on 15 September. Turkey has pledged to prevent Kobane from falling to the militants and its parliament has authorised military operations against militants in Iraq and Syria. But it appears to have taken no action to prevent the fighting. Our correspondent says it is reluctant to lend support to the Kurdish forces in Kobane because they are allied to the PKK, banned as a terrorist organisation in Turkey. The situation in Kobane does not appear to have changed dramatically, he adds, though some mortar and small arms fire has been heard in recent hours. But IS is getting closer and US-led air strikes are not stopping the advance. Capturing the town, also known as Ayn al-Arab, would give IS unbroken control of a long stretch of the Syrian-Turkish border. Activists from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that at least 35 IS jihadists had been killed in air strikes, but that most had died in a different area of northern Syria, near the town of Shadadi. There is no way of independently verifying the reports, but the US confirmed four air strikes hit the Kobane area overnight. Mr Assad is rarely seen in public, as his government continues fighting a civil war against rebel groups ranging from the Western-backed Free Syrian Army to Islamist militants including IS. More than 190,000 people have been killed in more than three years of conflict. end quote from: Kurds clash with Turkish security forces on Syria borderI was very worried about this happening because their real enemy is ISIS not each other. ISIS likely would try to make the Kurds and Turkish soldiers fight too. This would be what ISIS would do to prevent Turkey and the Kurds from allying with each other against ISIS. |
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