(Reuters) - Iraqi
Kurdish forces have blunted but not broken the siege of the Syrian
border town of Kobani, a week after arriving to great fanfare with heavy
weapons and fighters in a bid to save it from Islamic State. Kobani has become a
test of the U.S.-led coalition's ability to halt the advance of the
Sunni Muslim insurgents. The town is one of few areas in Syria where it can co-ordinate air strikes with operations by an effective ground force. The
arrival of the Iraqi Kurd peshmerga, or "those who face death," with
armored vehicles and artillery, has enabled them to shell Islamic State
positions around Kobani and take back some villages. But
the front lines in the town itself are little changed, its eastern part
still controlled by the insurgents, and the west still largely held by
the main Syrian Kurdish armed group, the YPG, and allied fighters. "There
is no change at all in Kobani as a result of the peshmerga. Maybe one
or two streets are gained then lost, back and forth," said Rami
Abdulrahman of the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights,
which monitors the war. "ISIS
(Islamic State) posts are well entrenched in Kobani city, and the Kurds
say they need more heavy weaponry to make a dent ... There also needs
to be better co-ordination between the Kurdish units and coalition air
forces," he said, adding that Islamic State suicide attacks were also
proving effective. The peshmerga entered Kobani in more than a dozen trucks and jeeps last Friday from Turkey, cheering and making victory signs. They
were given a heroes' welcome by Turkish Kurds and Syrian Kurdish
refugees, angry at Turkey's refusal to send in its own troops and
optimistic, as they lined the streets cloaked in Kurdish flags, that the
peshmerga would turn the tide. The Kurdistan Regional Government, which runs a semi-autonomous region in northern Iraq,
has made clear from the outset that its peshmerga fighters, numbering
around 150, would not engage in direct combat in Kobani but rather
provide artillery support to Syrian Kurds. "Of
course the presence of the peshmerga has been helpful because they’re
shelling ISIS positions, destroying their fighters and weapons," Idris
Nassan, a local official in Kobani, said by telephone. "Because
of the peshmerga shelling we've stopped ISIS advances in the western
rural areas as well as the east and southeastern front line of the
city," he told Reuters. HEAVY WEAPONS There
was intense fighting in the days after their arrival, with heavy
shelling and almost continuous gunfire as peshmerga forces and fighters
from Syria's moderate rebel ranks helped the YPG push the Islamists out
of some surrounding villages. On Friday, a coalition jet bombed a site southwest of the town. No gunfire or shelling could be heard across the border. Nassan
said that "constant shelling" by peshmerga forces had taken away some
of Islamic State's ability to attack and that there had been good
co-ordination between the Kurdish units and the Free Syrian Army, the
moderate rebel fighters. A
Reuters correspondent on the border said the intensity of the shelling
had died down since then, and there had been no obvious change in the
frontlines in the town itself. "ISIS
brings new fighters and supplies all the time, so we need new fighters
and supplies too," Nassan said, adding Islamic State fighters had seized
nine tanks in an attack on the Sha'ar gas field in central Syria which they were bringing to Kobani. The
Sha'ar gas field, to the east of the city of Homs, has changed hands
four times since July when Islamic State fighters first seized it. The
Observatory said Syrian government forces retook it on Thursday. Hevi
Mustefa, the Kurdish leader of the Syrian province of Afrin, said
Islamic fighters were amassing for an attack there, 200 km (125 miles)
to the west of Kobani. Afrin,
which declared autonomy like Kobani and a third Kurdish-dominated
region, Jazeera, now risks becoming "another Kobani," Mustefa told
Reuters during a visit to Ankara. Despite
having limited strategic significance, Kobani has become a powerful
symbol in the battle against the hardline Sunni Muslim insurgents who
have captured large expanses of Iraq and Syria and declared an Islamic "caliphate". The
battle has raged in full view of the Turkish frontier, and Turkey's
reluctance to help defend the town sparked riots among Turkish Kurds
last month in which 40 people died. A
lawmaker from Turkey's pro-Kurdish Peoples' Democratic Party accused
soldiers of killing an activist as she and others crossed the border to
show solidarity with Kurdish forces. TV
footage from Thursday showed soldiers firing tear gas at a large group
of people running through a minefield and along a railway that divide
Syria and Turkey. "The
person killed yesterday after Turkish soldiers opened fire was shot
even though she already reached the Kobani side," MP Levent Tuzel told
reporters in Istanbul. His party has called on Turkey to re-open the
crossing and let in aid and weapons. A
senior state official in the nearby town of Suruc said soldiers used
tear gas but were not aware of any deaths or injuries from a shooting,
CNN Turk reported. The military General Staff did not comment on the
incident.
Peshmergas blunt, don't break, Islamic State siege of Syria's Kobani
![](CustomImage/get/700/500/96526723bf20ad3cdef26e00.jpeg)
Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.