(Reuters) - An
Islamic State suicide bomber detonated a truck laden with explosives on
Monday in the besieged Kurdish town of Kobani, near the Turkish border
crossing with Syria, a monitoring group and Kurdish sources said. The attack took place
in a northern district of Kobani, which has been the scene of heavy
clashes between Kurdish forces and Islamic State fighters. Idris
Nassan, a Kurdish official in Kobani, said two Kurdish fighters had
been wounded during the suicide bomb attack, which appeared to have been
aimed at clearing a way for the IS fighters to advance further into the
town. "They (IS fighters)
tried to advance towards the (border) crossing but the (Kurdish)
People's Protection Units repelled them ... and they were not able to
push forward," Nassan told Reuters. The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group reported more
heavy clashes on Monday inside the city, where U.S.-led air strikes have
so far failed to halt the militants' advance. The
Observatory said there had been at least five U.S.-led strikes early on
Monday, mainly targeting southern districts of Kobani, which is known
as Ayn al-Arab in Arabic. Clashes also continued to the east, killing a dozen Islamic State fighters, the Observatory said. The militant group wants to seize the town to consolidate a dramatic sweep across northern Iraq and Syria. The advances by the group, which espouses a rigidly conservative brand of Islam, has sent shockwaves through the Middle East.
Islamic State suicide bomber detonates truck near Syria-Turkey border
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Reuters
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