Kurdish
fighters and a monitoring body have reported that "Islamic State"
fighters have fled the Syrian-Turkish border city of Kobani. Apart from
sporadic fighting on the outskirts, the area was said to be secure.
Deutsche Welle, 26 Jan 2015
Extremist
fighters with the self-styled "Islamic State" ("IS") were
driven out of Kobani on Monday, activists and Kurdish officials said, in what
would be a key coup for forces opposing the Sunni Islamist militia.
"The
Islamic State is on the verge of defeat," said Kurdish official Idriss
Nassan, speaking from Turkey near the Syrian border. "Their defenses have
collapsed and its fighters have fled."
The
British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also reported the partial IS
retreat out of Kobani, officially known as Ain al-Arab, but noted some sporadic
fighting.
"The
Kurds are pursuing some jihadis on the eastern outskirts of Kobani, but there
is no more fighting inside now."
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| Months of fighting have leveled Kobani's old market street |
Nassan said
he was preparing to visit the border town on Tuesday, saying he expected it to
be completely freed by then.
Since
mid-September, the balled for Kobani has reportedly claimed some 1,600 lives.
According to figures from the UK-based Observatory watchdog released earlier
this month, "IS" had lost 1,075 fighters in its bid to control the
city, with 459 Kurdish fighters and 32 civilians also killed.
Islamic
State fighters first began capturing villages close to Kobani in September,
before thrusting into the town itself, pushing thousands of refugees out of
Kobani and across the border into Turkey.
The town
became something of a symbol for international intervention to stop the IS
advance; US Secretary of State John Kerry said after the US-led bombing strikes
against IS were announced that it would be "morally very difficult"
not to help Kobani.
A combination
of US-led airstrikes and the arrival of Kurdish peshmerga fighters from Iraq
helped turn the tide in the battle for Kobani, with the peshmerga evening out
IS' earlier artillery superiority.
Kurdish
official Nassan said that coalition airstrikes had intensified in recent days
to lay the groundwork for his fighters' final push on IS positions to the south
and east of the town.
Since the US airstrikes began on September 23, an average
of around six air strikes per day have targeted fighters in or near Kobani.
Four-fifths of all coalition airstrikes in Syria, as opposed to Iraq, have been
in or around the town.



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