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IS kills 146 civilians in assault on Syria’s Kobane

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The Islamic State group killed 146 civilians in its offensive on the Kurdish town of Kobane, in what a monitor said Friday was one of the jihadists' "worst massacres" in Syria.

The killing spree, which took place mostly inside Kobane itself, was widely seen as vengeance for a series of defeats inflicted on the jihadists by Kurdish militia in recent weeks.

At least 120 civilians were killed in a 24-hour rampage on Kobane, and another 26 were executed in a nearby village, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The assault began on Thursday when three IS suicide bombers blew up vehicles at the entrances to the town, which has become a symbol of Kurdish resistance.

Women and children were among civilians whose bodies were found in their homes and in the streets, the Observatory said.

A wounded child is brought to the hospital in Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province  on June 25 ...
A wounded child is brought to the hospital in Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province on June 25, 2015 after a deadly bombing in Kobane, across the border in Syria
Ilyas Akengin, AFP

"According to medical sources and Kobane residents, 120 civilians were executed by IS in their homes or killed by the group's rockets or snipers," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

"When they entered the town, the jihadists took up positions in buildings at the southeast and southwest entrances, firing at everything that moved."

Local journalist Mostafa Ali said there was no military dimension to the assault.

"IS doesn't want to take over the town. They just came to kill the highest number of civilians in the ugliest ways possible," he told AFP.

"Every family in Kobane lost a family member on Thursday," Kurdish activist Arin Shekhmos said.

- 'Human shields' in Kobane -

The jihadists entered Kobane at dawn on Thursday disguised as Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) fighters, said Ali.

People in Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province look across the Syrian border on June 25  2015 a...
People in Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province look across the Syrian border on June 25, 2015 at smoke billowing in the Syrian town of Kobane
Stringer, AFP

They took up positions in buildings in the south of the town, using civilians as "human shields".

"There are at least 70 civilians in these various neighbourhoods that have been taken hostage by IS," Ali added.

"The YPG has sent reinforcements and have encircled the buildings, but the situation is difficult. The YPG doesn't want to hurt the women and children there."

More than 1,000 fleeing civilians waited on the Syrian side of the frontier with Turkey on Friday, carefully watched by Turkish troops and police on the other side.

Relatives who had made it to the Turkish side cried in despair, an AFP photographer reported.

Kobane was the scene of one of IS's most dramatic defeats in January when it was ousted by Kurdish militia backed by US-led air strikes after four months of heavy fighting.

People wait at the border fence across from Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province  on June 25  2...
People wait at the border fence across from Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province, on June 25, 2015 after they escaped from Kobane
Ilyas Akengin, AFP

Kurdish fighters have gone on to seize Tal Abyad, another border town farther east, in a heavy blow to the jihadists' supply lines.

On Friday, the Turkish military ordered the dishonourable discharge of a soldier IS briefly abducted in January, Hurriyet newspaper reported.

Ozgur Ors was dismissed for "failure to resist ISIS, being an instrument for the organisation's propaganda in the media and harming the reputation of the Turkish Armed Forces," it reported.

Full details of his case have been kept under wraps.

- Civilians flee Hasakeh -

IS has hit back against Kurdish victories with an offensive against Hasakeh in the northeast, capital of the mainly Kurdish province of the same name.

Abdel Rahman said IS had seized two neighbourhoods in the city's south as government forces, who jointly controlled the city with Kurdish militia, carried out air strikes.

At least 20 jihadists and 30 pro-government fighters were killed when IS captured southern parts of Hasakeh.

Syrian Kurds wait behind barbed wired on the Syrian side after they fled the town of Kobane  also kn...
Syrian Kurds wait behind barbed wired on the Syrian side after they fled the town of Kobane, also known as Ain al-Arab, on June 26, 2015
Bulent Kilic, AFP

On Thursday, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said the clashes had displaced an estimated 60,000 people.

Roughly 50,000 were displaced within Hasakeh, while another 10,000 had fled north towards Amuda.

Shekhmos, the activist, said civilians from southern neighbourhoods had fled to Kurdish-controlled parts of the city, but that the YPG was not yet involved in the fighting.

The jihadists previously advanced to the southern edge of Hasakeh in May but were pushed back by government forces.

In southern Syria, a rebel alliance pressed an assault on the city and provincial capital of Daraa which it began on Thursday, with some 40 people reported killed.

President Bashar al-Assad's regime has already lost two provincial capitals in the four-year-old civil war: IS-held Raqa in the Euphrates valley and Idlib in the northwest, which is held by a rebel alliance including Al-Qaeda.

At least 230,000 people have been killed since Syria's conflict erupted in 2011.

The Islamic State group killed 146 civilians in its offensive on the Kurdish town of Kobane, in what a monitor said Friday was one of the jihadists’ “worst massacres” in Syria.

The killing spree, which took place mostly inside Kobane itself, was widely seen as vengeance for a series of defeats inflicted on the jihadists by Kurdish militia in recent weeks.

At least 120 civilians were killed in a 24-hour rampage on Kobane, and another 26 were executed in a nearby village, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The assault began on Thursday when three IS suicide bombers blew up vehicles at the entrances to the town, which has become a symbol of Kurdish resistance.

Women and children were among civilians whose bodies were found in their homes and in the streets, the Observatory said.

A wounded child is brought to the hospital in Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province  on June 25 ...

A wounded child is brought to the hospital in Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province on June 25, 2015 after a deadly bombing in Kobane, across the border in Syria
Ilyas Akengin, AFP

“According to medical sources and Kobane residents, 120 civilians were executed by IS in their homes or killed by the group’s rockets or snipers,” Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

“When they entered the town, the jihadists took up positions in buildings at the southeast and southwest entrances, firing at everything that moved.”

Local journalist Mostafa Ali said there was no military dimension to the assault.

“IS doesn’t want to take over the town. They just came to kill the highest number of civilians in the ugliest ways possible,” he told AFP.

“Every family in Kobane lost a family member on Thursday,” Kurdish activist Arin Shekhmos said.

– ‘Human shields’ in Kobane –

The jihadists entered Kobane at dawn on Thursday disguised as Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG) fighters, said Ali.

People in Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province look across the Syrian border on June 25  2015 a...

People in Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province look across the Syrian border on June 25, 2015 at smoke billowing in the Syrian town of Kobane
Stringer, AFP

They took up positions in buildings in the south of the town, using civilians as “human shields”.

“There are at least 70 civilians in these various neighbourhoods that have been taken hostage by IS,” Ali added.

“The YPG has sent reinforcements and have encircled the buildings, but the situation is difficult. The YPG doesn’t want to hurt the women and children there.”

More than 1,000 fleeing civilians waited on the Syrian side of the frontier with Turkey on Friday, carefully watched by Turkish troops and police on the other side.

Relatives who had made it to the Turkish side cried in despair, an AFP photographer reported.

Kobane was the scene of one of IS’s most dramatic defeats in January when it was ousted by Kurdish militia backed by US-led air strikes after four months of heavy fighting.

People wait at the border fence across from Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province  on June 25  2...

People wait at the border fence across from Suruc in Turkey's Sanliurfa province, on June 25, 2015 after they escaped from Kobane
Ilyas Akengin, AFP

Kurdish fighters have gone on to seize Tal Abyad, another border town farther east, in a heavy blow to the jihadists’ supply lines.

On Friday, the Turkish military ordered the dishonourable discharge of a soldier IS briefly abducted in January, Hurriyet newspaper reported.

Ozgur Ors was dismissed for “failure to resist ISIS, being an instrument for the organisation’s propaganda in the media and harming the reputation of the Turkish Armed Forces,” it reported.

Full details of his case have been kept under wraps.

– Civilians flee Hasakeh –

IS has hit back against Kurdish victories with an offensive against Hasakeh in the northeast, capital of the mainly Kurdish province of the same name.

Abdel Rahman said IS had seized two neighbourhoods in the city’s south as government forces, who jointly controlled the city with Kurdish militia, carried out air strikes.

At least 20 jihadists and 30 pro-government fighters were killed when IS captured southern parts of Hasakeh.

Syrian Kurds wait behind barbed wired on the Syrian side after they fled the town of Kobane  also kn...

Syrian Kurds wait behind barbed wired on the Syrian side after they fled the town of Kobane, also known as Ain al-Arab, on June 26, 2015
Bulent Kilic, AFP

On Thursday, the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said the clashes had displaced an estimated 60,000 people.

Roughly 50,000 were displaced within Hasakeh, while another 10,000 had fled north towards Amuda.

Shekhmos, the activist, said civilians from southern neighbourhoods had fled to Kurdish-controlled parts of the city, but that the YPG was not yet involved in the fighting.

The jihadists previously advanced to the southern edge of Hasakeh in May but were pushed back by government forces.

In southern Syria, a rebel alliance pressed an assault on the city and provincial capital of Daraa which it began on Thursday, with some 40 people reported killed.

President Bashar al-Assad’s regime has already lost two provincial capitals in the four-year-old civil war: IS-held Raqa in the Euphrates valley and Idlib in the northwest, which is held by a rebel alliance including Al-Qaeda.

At least 230,000 people have been killed since Syria’s conflict erupted in 2011.

AFP
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With 2,400 staff representing 100 different nationalities, AFP covers the world as a leading global news agency. AFP provides fast, comprehensive and verified coverage of the issues affecting our daily lives.

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