Kuwait Times

Turkish threats leave Syria Kurds in fear for symbolic city

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KOBANE: In the Syrian Kurdish city of Kobane, gripped by fear of a Turkish offensive, Saleh Abdo Khalil passes an open-air “museum” of buildings reduced to rubble. “Daesh destroyed these buildings,” the local baker said, using an acronym for Islamic State (IS) group jihadists who previously terrorized this region. That danger has passed, but now, he says: “Turkey wants to destroy the rest of the city.”

Since Sunday, Turkey has carried out air strikes against the semi-autonomous Kurdish zones in north and northeaste­rn Syria, and across the border in Iraq. Those raids, which started in Kobane, have killed 58 Kurdish fighters and Syrian soldiers as well as a Kurdish journalist, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said. Ankara has threatened a ground offensive and made clear that Kobane, also known as Ayn alArab, would be a primary objective.

US-supported Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), now the Kurds’ de facto army in the area, led the battle that dislodged IS fighters from the last scraps of their Syrian territory in 2019. Years before, in 2015, Kurdish forces drove the jihadists from Kobane, on the border with Turkey, and the city became a symbol of their victory against IS. To keep the memories of the combat alive, Kurdish authoritie­s erected a cordon around a group of destroyed buildings, burnt-out vehicles and missile remnants, dubbing the area the Kobane “museum”.

‘People don’t sleep at night’

While the football World Cup in Qatar has captured some residents’ attention, tension can be read on their faces. Most fled the combat with IS before slowly returning and rebuilding. “We fought IS for the whole world, and today the world closes its eyes and acts like an ostrich while Turkey bombs,” said the baker Khalil, 42. One week after a bombing in Istanbul on November 13 that killed six people and wounded 81, Ankara said it launched air strikes from “70 planes and drones” against Kurdish bases in Iraq and Syria, starting with Kobane.

Turkey blamed the Istanbul bombing on the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) - designated a terrorist group by the European Union and the United States-and said it was ordered from Kobane. The PKK has waged an insurgency against the Turkish state since 1984, and Turkey alleges that Syrian Kurdish fighters are the group’s allies. Kurdish groups denied any involvemen­t in the Ankara blast. Turkey then hit other areas including the SDF bastion of Hasakeh province, in the northeast, and President Recep Tayyip Erdogan vowed Tuesday that Turkey would “soon” begin a ground operation.—AFP

 ?? ?? KOBANE: A picture shows a view of the ‘Free Woman’ square in the Kurdish majority northern Syrian city of Kobane.— AFP
KOBANE: A picture shows a view of the ‘Free Woman’ square in the Kurdish majority northern Syrian city of Kobane.— AFP

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