Three Islamic State suicide bombers attack Kobani

Militants make slight advances in Kurdish border town,

Turkish soldiers hold their position on a tank as they watch the town of Kobani from near the Mursitpinar border crossing, on the Turkish-Syrian border. Photograph: Gokhan Sahin/Getty Images
Turkish soldiers hold their position on a tank as they watch the town of Kobani from near the Mursitpinar border crossing, on the Turkish-Syrian border. Photograph: Gokhan Sahin/Getty Images

Three Islamic State fighters blew themselves up today in Kobani near the Turkish border with Syria, a monitoring group said, with the hardline militants making slight advances inside the besieged Kurdish town.

In one of the attacks an IS fighter detonated a truck laden with explosives in a northern district of Kobani, which has been the scene of heavy clashes between Kurdish forces and Islamic State fighters, Kurdish sources said.

Idris Nassan, a Kurdish official in Kobani, said two Kurdish fighters had been wounded during the suicide attack.

Kurdish forces are holding out in Kobani as Islamic State fighters seized more ground in the Syrian border town. Image: Reuters
Kurdish forces are holding out in Kobani as Islamic State fighters seized more ground in the Syrian border town. Image: Reuters

“They tried to advance towards the (border) crossing, but the (Kurdish) People’s Protection Units repelled them ... and they were not able to push forward,” Mr Nassan told Reuters.

READ SOME MORE

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group reported more heavy fighting today inside the city, where US-led air strikes have so far failed to halt the militants’ advance.

Rami Abderahman of the Observatory said one of the suicide attacks targeted a bus station in the northwest of Kobani and that the group had taken around 50 percent of the town.

“They now control the cultural centre, which means they have advanced further inside the town,” he said.

The Observatory said there had been at least five US-led air strikes early today, mainly targeting southern districts of Kobani, which is known as Ayn al-Arab in Arabic.

Clashes also continued to the east, killing a dozen Islamic State fighters, the Observatory said.

The militant group wants to seize the town to consolidate a dramatic sweep across northern Iraq and Syria. The advances by the group, which espouses a rigidly conservative brand of Islam, has sent shockwaves through the Middle East.

Reuters