Vancouver Sun

Inside the battle to reclaim Kobani

Kurdish fi ghters are driven by fi erce revolution­ary conviction as they try to push back militants

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KOBANI, Syria — The men and women of Kobani call one another “heval” — Kurdish for comrade — and fight with revolution­ary conviction, vowing to liberate what they regard as Kurdish land from Islamic State group militants.

Amid the wasteland and destroyed buildings, a sense of camaraderi­e has developed among the town’s defenders who have for more than two months doggedly fought off the advances by the extremists.

Often, members of the same family can be found on the front lines.

Nineteen- year- old Shida’s father was a fighter before her. After he was killed, she gave up hopes of becoming an artist and decided she must follow in his footsteps to honour his example. She says her mother supports her decision. One of her six brothers is also fighting, the rest of her siblings are living in Turkey.

“I will not allow the enemy to take away my land and its soil,” she said. “I will not leave my land.”

An exclusive report shot by videojourn­alist Jake Simkin who spent a week inside Kobani late last month offered a rare, in- depth glimpse of the men and women fighting to expel the Islamic State extremists from Kobani, a predominan­tly Kurdish town in northern Syria by the Turkish border.

Backed by small numbers of Iraqi peshmerga forces and Free Syrian Army rebels, the Kurdish fighters, whose political founders espouse a firm leftwing ideology, are locked in fierce battles to push back Islamic State, which swept into the town in mid- September.

In a surprising display of resilience, the Kurdish fighters in the frontier town have held out against the more experience­d jihadis more than two months into the militants’ offensive, hanging on to their territory against all expectatio­ns.

“We are fighting for freedom,” said a Kurdish sniper who goes under the nickname Zinar, Kurdish for The Rock.

“Freedom isn’t something you can easily get or something that someone just gives to you,” he said. “Freedom is only achieved when you go out and get it yourself.”

The militants’ advance was part of Islamic State’s blitz this year that overran large parts of Syria and neighbouri­ng Iraq. Kobani, once a town of about 50,000 people but now virtually deserted except for the fighters, has seen some of the fiercest urban warfare in the Syrian civil war, now in its fourth year.

Abu Layla, commander of a Free Syrian Army- linked group in Kobani called Shams al- Shamal ( Sun of the North) Brigade, said he is proud of what the FSA and the Kurdish fighters have achieved together in Kobani so far.

Their alliance is called “Burkhan al Furat,” which translates as Volcano of the Euphrates.

Abu Layla’s group has over a hundred fighters, mostly ethnic Arabs and Turkmens from Abu Layla’s hometown of Minbej.

He said he is not fighting for the Kurds, Arabs or Turkmens, or for Christians or Muslims.

“I’m fighting for a free, democratic Syria, not an Islamic Syria but a free, democratic Syria,” he said.

 ?? MOHAMMAD HANNON/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE ?? Islamic State militants are striving to unite extremist factions in Libya and have set up training camps in the country, a U. S. general says. It is a move being watched closely by neighbouri­ng Egypt.
MOHAMMAD HANNON/ THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE Islamic State militants are striving to unite extremist factions in Libya and have set up training camps in the country, a U. S. general says. It is a move being watched closely by neighbouri­ng Egypt.

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