(Reuters) - A new
offensive by al Qaeda offshoot the Islamic State on Kurdish-held areas
of northern Syria has triggered a regional call for arms from the Kurds,
and Turkish Kurds are coming to their aid. The war in Syria has
already drawn in an array of regional players and the regional Kurdish
involvement complicates an increasingly fragmented scene across Syria
and Iraq, where the Islamic state took control of large areas last
month. The hardline Sunni
militants launched a new push towards the Syrian city of Ain al-Arab
about two weeks ago using weaponry seized from Iraq including new
missiles and U.S.-made armored Humvee vehicles, Syrian Kurdish officials
say. The predominantly
Kurdish city is known as Kobani to the Kurds who have controlled it
since 2012, part of an expansion of their influence following the
collapse of central government control that has allowed for closer ties
with Kurds across the border. "Our
brothers in northern Kurdistan - Turkish Kurdistan - have started a
campaign to send youths to Kobani to defend it," said Redur Xelil,
spokesman for the armed Syrian Kurdish group the YPG, or the People's
Protection Units. "There
are some youths who have crossed the border from Turkey to Kobani who
are now in the frontlines alongside the People's Protection Units," he
said by telephone. "It is all to repel the Islamic State." A
Turkish security official said Kurdish militants were heading to Syria
from camps run by the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) in northern Iraq. "The
PKK sent some of its militants to Kobani after (Islamic State)
attacks," the official, speaking on condition of anonymity, said. Syria
has already turned into a sectarian battleground with Shi'ite groups
from Lebanon and Iraq fighting on the side of the Damascus government
while Sunni foreign fighters from across the world are fighting with the
Islamic State. It is
widely believed that Kurds from Turkey have been fighting covertly
alongside the Kurds in Syria for some time. The Syrian Kurds have
declared an autonomous provincial government in ethnic Kurdish areas. Ain
al-Arab and the surrounding areas fell under Kurdish control a year
into the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad that has since
turned into an armed insurgency dominated by radical Sunni Islamists. ISLAMIC STATE "MAKES PROGRESS" The
Islamic State, which last month declared its leader caliph, or leader
of all the world's Muslims, has seized no fewer than 10 villages near
Kobani in the last 15 days, said Rami Abdurrahman, founder of the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, which records developments in the Syrian
war. "They have certainly made progress," he said, adding that fatalities on both side were measured in the dozens. A Twitter account affiliated with the Islamic State reported mortar attacks on Ain al-Arab on Saturday. Ain
al-Arab is the only part of a 300 km (190 mile) section of the border
with Turkey not controlled by the Islamic State, previously known as the
Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), Abdurrahman said. Among
the Kurds, he said the dead included two fighters from the PKK, a group
based in the Qandil mountains in northern Iraq and which for years
waged an armed campaign for Kurdish rights in Turkey. A ceasefire
between the PKK and Turkey took hold last year. The
Union of Kurdistan Communities (KCK), the Kurdish militants' umbrella
political group, on Saturday issued a statement calling on "all Kurds"
to head to Kobani to "participate in the resistance and embrace it". The attack on Kobani was "in fact an attack on the whole people of Kurdistan", it said. Security
sources in southeastern Turkey told Reuters that scores of Turkish
Kurds had joined the Syrian Kurdish forces following the statement. Abdurraham of the Syrian Observatory said 800 to 900 Kurdish fighters from Turkey were now fighting in Kobani. One
21-year old Turkish Kurd in Diyarbakir, Turkey, who asked to be
identified only by the initials A.B., told Reuters he was among Kurdish
youths ready to go and join the Syrian Kurds. "My
Kurdish brothers are in a difficult position. I will go to Kobani, the
KCK call is an order for us all. Every Kurdish youth should abide by
this order. I know that many people went to Kobani from here,” he said.
Kurds go to Syria from Turkey to fight Islamists
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Reuters
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