(Reuters) -
Kurdish forces backed by Syrian insurgent groups took control of a hill
inside the provincial stronghold of the militant Islamic State group on
Sunday after deadly clashes, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
said. The Kurdish forces,
supported by U.S.-led air strikes, drove Islamic State fighters from the
town of Kobani last month near the Turkish border and have pushed them
back from surrounding villages in northern Syria. Islamic State still holds tracts of land across northern and eastern Syria and into Iraq. Now
the Kurds and other local fighters who oppose Islamic State have taken a
hill south of Kobani which lies within Raqqa province - the stronghold
of the al Qaeda offshoot in Syria, said the Observatory, which tracks the conflict through sources on the ground. "It
is the first time they get into Raqqa," the Observatory's founder Rami
Abdulrahman said. He added that at least 35 Islamic State fighters and
four members of the Kurdish forces had been killed on Sunday in battles
near Kobani, which were the heaviest since the Kurds took back the town. The
fight for Kobani, known as Ayn al-Arab in Arabic, become the focus of
international efforts to combat Islamic State and was the first time
that a U.S-led aerial campaign had worked with local ground forces to
oust the militants in Syria. The
Observatory said on Saturday that the Kurds had regained control of at
least 163 villages around Kobani in the three weeks since they pushed
Islamic State fighters out of the town. In
recent weeks the Kurds were joined by several hundred rebel fighters in
the battles for areas surrounding the town, according to the
Observatory. These included the Shams al-Shamal brigade and the Raqqa
Revolutionaries Brigade, which both oppose the jihadists.
Kurds, Syrian rebels edge into Islamic State stronghold: monitor
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