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TERROR WARS
Kobane in ruins after Kurds drive out IS
By Bulent KILIC, Mohamad AL GHANDOUR
Kobane, Syria (AFP) Jan 28, 2015


After Kobane's capture, refugees return blocked
Suruc, Turkey (AFP) Jan 28, 2015 - The fierce battle for the Syrian border town of Kobane is over, but for refugees in Turkey desperate to return home the massive destruction and ongoing fighting means they still must wait.

"We all want to go home. But go home to what?" asked one woman in tears, who like many others experienced short-lived euphoria after the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) recaptured the town Monday from Islamic State (IS) fighters.

But shortly after the shooting ended in a battle that observers say killed 1,800 fighters -- including some 1,200 from IS -- the word got back to Turkey that Kobane lay in ruins.

Proof of the intensity of the four-month battle stood everywhere Wednesday -- buildings pounded to dust by coalition airstrikes and shelling, cars torched, and unexploded explosives strewn in the street.

"Our heritage is our most valuable possession. But in the current conditions, returning home is simply impossible to imagine," said 36-year-old Cemile Hasan through sobs.

"Frankly I'd be happy if we could be home in a year. But I'm optimistic in saying that, because we're going to have to rebuild everything," she added.

The ferocious fighting sent some 200,000 people fleeing across the border into Turkey, which has been working to move hundreds of refugees from Kobane to a new camp in the southeastern border town of Suruc able to accommodate up to 35,000 people.

For now it is impossible to cross back into Syria as police and soldiers have sealed the crossing near Kobane until further notice, Turkey's border security agency said.

-'We lost everything'-

Turkish security forces on Tuesday fired tear gas and water cannon to push back people approaching the barbed wire fence that marks the line between the two countries.

On top of the devastation in Kobane, refugees would face the prospect of a flare-up of fighting or bombing should they return.

On Wednesday, clashes with IS fighters were reported near Kobane in villages where coalition planes were bombing the jihadists.

The United States had said on Tuesday that Kurdish fighters were in control of about 90 percent of the town.

But a State Department official warned that the militants, also known as ISIL, were "adaptive and resilient" and no-one was declaring "mission accomplished" yet.

Stera Hussein, holding her two-week-old child in her arms, said she already had to flee for her life at a moment's notice.

"It was horrible. The YPG (Kurdish militia) told us for days that everything was fine, that they guaranteed our safety," she said. "And then suddenly they told us to leave within the hour without being able to take anything with us."

She added: "Our lives were saved, but we lost everything."

And even if she were allowed to go home immediately, she would think twice before crossing back into Syria.

"I don't know if I should trust the YPG any more," she said. "They misled us once and we almost paid with our lives."

Pulverised buildings, heavily armed fighters roaming otherwise deserted rubble-strewn streets: the ferocious battle for Kobane has left the Syrian border town in ruins, according to a team of AFP journalists who arrived there Wednesday.

Kurdish forces recaptured the town on the Turkish frontier from the Islamic State group on Monday in a symbolic blow to the jihadists who have seized swathes of territory in their brutal onslaught across Syria and Iraq.

After more than four months of fighting, the streets of Kobane -- now patrolled by Kurdish militiamen with barely a civilian in sight -- were a mass of debris and buildings that had in some case been turned to dust.

Kurdish fighters armed with Kalashnikov assault rifles greeted the journalists with a hail of celebratory gunshots into the air and made the "V" for victory sign.

In one street, an injured fighter sat on the roadside next to an unexploded mortar shell, his leg bandaged and crutches by his side. In another, a bright yellow car was left abandoned, riddled with bullet holes, as two men walked by to inspect the damage.

On Tuesday, Kurdish forces battled IS militants in villages around Kobane, with warnings that the fight was far from over.

Still, the recapture of Kobane appeared to be a major step in the campaign against the IS militants who had seemed poised in September to seize the town, whose symbolic importance had far outgrown its military value.

The victory in Kobane comes as Syrian opposition figures and representatives of the regime of President Bashar al-Assad began talks in Moscow Wednesday.

But there was little hope that they would make a breakthrough in ending the brutal war that has killed close to 200,000 people since 2011.

The rise of IS -- which was threatening Wednesday to execute a Japanese hostage and a captured Jordanian airforce pilot -- has changed the West's approach to Syria and spurred hope that the warring sides might find common ground in the face of a mutual foe.

But expectations are low for the Moscow talks as the main opposition group, the exiled National Coalition, has refused to attend.

- Half the town destroyed -

Analysts said air strikes by the US-led coalition had been key to the success of the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) in Kobane because the bombing had taken out some of the jihadists' heavier weaponry and hitting their supply routes.

"Our forces fulfilled the promise of victory," the militia said, but cautioned that fighting was not over yet.

A minister in the regional Kobane government said Tuesday that at least half of the town had been destroyed.

The United States had said on Tuesday that Kurdish fighters were in control of about 90 percent of the town.

But a State Department official warned that the militants, also known as ISIL, were "adaptive and resilient" and no-one was declaring "mission accomplished" yet.

"IS control over its most important strongholds in Syria and Iraq remains intact and there is a lack of a local military force to challenge IS in places like Mosul," said Aymenn Jawad al-Tamimi from the Philadelphia-based Middle East Forum.

Observers say IS lost nearly 1,200 fighters in the battle, of a total of 1,800 killed, despite outgunning YPG forces with sophisticated weaponry captured from Iraqi and Syrian military bases.

- Border still closed -

The combat also sparked a mass exodus, with some 200,000 people fleeing across the border into Turkey.

But Turkish security forces on Tuesday fired tear gas and water cannon to push back people approaching the barbed wire fence.

The border remained closed Wednesday.

"We won't let any refugees cross until further notice," an official from Turkey's disaster management agency AFAD told AFP.

Turkish authorities were working to move hundreds of refugees from Kobane to a new camp in the southeastern border town of Suruc which is able to accommodate up to 35,000 people.

It is the biggest-ever refugee camp opened by Turkey, which has taken in 1.7 million Syrian refugees since the Syrian conflict erupted in 2011 as a popular uprising against Assad.

Idris Nassan, an official with the Kobane regional government, said Tuesday the authorities were urging people not to return to their homes as at least 50 percent of the city was destroyed.

"There is no food, no medicine. We don't have electricity or water."

The US official said many foreign fighters -- including Australians, Belgians, Canadians and Chechens -- were among the dead jihadists.

With the eyes of the international media watching, the jihadists "wanted to raise the largest flag they ever made over Kobane," the official said.

"Kobane shows that you're not going to be part of something great... so the whole narrative that ISIL is trying to put out, Kobane really puts a dent in it."


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