Islamic State in Syria Battles Kurds, Suffers Losses
(AFP)
-- The Islamic State (IS), which has taken over large swathes of
war-torn Syria in just a few months, was on Thursday engaged in fighting
Kurds and members of a Sunni tribe.
The Syrian Observatory for
Human Rights said the well-equipped Kurds, who started fighting IS soon
after it emerged in Syria in spring last year, had on Wednesday taken
back several hills surrounding the city of Ain al-Arab (Kobane in
Kurdish) in the north.
The IS has been trying to take over Ain
al-Arab -- Syria's third Kurdish city -- and incorporate it into the
Islamic "caliphate" it proclaimed last month.
The fighting killed
14 members of the Kurdish People's Protection Units (PYG) and 35 IS
members. Dozens of other fighters were wounded, said the Observatory.
The fighting comes two weeks after some 800 Kurdish fighters entered Ain al-Arab from neighboring Turkey to fight IS.
There
are some 3.5 million Kurds in Syria, comprising some 15 percent of the
population. With the country swamped in a war that broke out three years
ago, the Kurds are seeking autonomy in the areas where they are a
majority.
Eastwards, the IS pounded regime positions in Hassakeh,
as they tried to surround the city of 200,000 Kurds, Arabs, Armenians
and other Christians.
IS fights Sunni tribe In the eastern,
oil-rich province of Deir Ezzor, most of which is under IS control,
members of the Shaitat Sunni tribe fought the jihadists, tweeting about
an "uprising" against the radical group.
The fighting erupted after the IS detained three members of the tribe, "violating an agreement" between the two sides, it said.
According
to the Observatory, the Shaitat tribe had promised IS it would not
oppose it, in exchange for the jihadists not harassing or attacking its
members.
The Sunni Shaitat tribe extends across three villages -- Abu Hamam, Kashkiyeh and Ghranij.
On
Thursday, a day after fighting broke out, IS members raided the three
villages, searching houses and kidnapping or "detaining" an unknown
number of people, said the Observatory, adding that fighting was raging
in the Shaitat villages.
Meanwhile, IS set up new checkpoints in the Deir Ezzor countryside, but gunmen opened fire at one of the checkpoints.
At least five jihadists were killed in the fighting, including a Belgian.
Syria's
war began as a peaceful movement for democratic change, but erupted
into conflict after President Bashar al-Assad's regime unleashed a
brutal crackdown against dissent.
Many months into the fighting, foreign jihadists began entering Syria.
Also
on Thursday, the Observatory reported that IS had imposed a strict
dress code for women in Deir Ezzor, forbidding them showing any part of
their bodies.
"Women... are completely forbidden from showing
their eyes," said an IS statement that the Observatory said was
distributed in areas under jihadist control in Deir Ezzor province.
Women
are also forbidden from wearing "open abayas (traditional black gowns)
that reveal colourful clothes worn underneath", it said, adding that
women "must not wear high heels".
It threatened an unspecified
punishment for women who violated the dress code, while also banning the
sale of cigarettes and narguileh (water pipe) products, as well as
smoking in public.
Army shelling kills 17 On another front in
Syria's complex war, the number of people killed in army shelling on an
opposition-held town northeast of Damascus on Wednesday rose to 17,
according to the Observatory.
Among the fatalities were three children. Dozens of other people were injured.
An
AFP photographer in Douma, which has been under suffocating army siege
for more than a year, said the shelling had hit several parts of the
town, including a busy market area.
"The shelling came suddenly.
One minute, children were playing in the market, the next, there were
body parts and wounded people everywhere," Abd Doumany said.
The photographer also described graphic scenes at one of the town's ill-equipped field hospitals.
"The wounded were being treated on the floor," he said.
Friday, August 1, 2014
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