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Turkish Security Troops Clash With Kurds, As Thousands Flee ISIS

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  • Turkish Security Troops Clash With Kurds, As Thousands Flee ISIS

    TURKISH SECURITY TROOPS CLASH WITH KURDS, AS THOUSANDS FLEE ISIS

    NewsWire
    Sept 22 2014

    By Boris Djuric September 22, 2014

    After clashes between Kurds and Turkish soldiers, Turkey's security
    forces closed the border with Syria as thousands of Kurds are trying
    to flee the Islamic State.

    (Newswire.net -- September 22, 2014) -- According to estimates by
    the UN's refugee agency, at least 70,000 Kurds, most of them women,
    children and elderly people, have fled to Turkey since Saturday alone,
    and the total may be even higher.

    Hundreds of Kurds showed up near the barbed wire border fence - some
    volunteering to join the struggle against IS, others asking to bring
    over aid to the refugees on the other side of the border.

    As was witnessed by Western camera crews, Turkish border forces refused
    to let them pass, and as tensions mounted, attempted to disperse the
    rally with water cannons and teargas.

    In turn, the Kurds set up barricades near the checkpoint, and began
    to throw stones at the uniformed Turkish troops.

    Meanwhile, the border remained closed, meaning that thousands of
    refugees were unable to escape to safety, or obtain basic necessities.

    The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that more
    than 300 Kurdish fighters have crossed into Syria from Turkey lately.

    Syrian Kurds have been fleeing to Turkey since Tuesday, when the
    Islamic State (IS, formerly known as ISIS) launched an offensive
    operation against Kurd-populated areas in the north of the country.

    The IS has captured at least 64 villages around the border city of
    Ayn al-Arab, which Kurds call Kobani.

    The Kurds are an ethnic group in the Middle East, mostly inhabiting a
    region known as Kurdistan, which spans adjacent parts of Iran, Iraq,
    Syria, and Turkey.

    They are an Iranian people and speak the Kurdish languages, which
    are members of the Iranian branch of Indo-European languages. The
    Kurds number about 30 million, the majority living in West Asia,
    with significant Kurdish diaspora communities in the cities of western
    Turkey, in Armenia, Georgia, Israel, Azerbaijan, Russia, Lebanon and,
    in recent decades, some European countries and the United States.

    The Kurdish people are adherents to a large number of different
    religions and creeds, constituting one of the most religiously diverse
    people in the region. Traditionally, Kurds have been known to take
    great liberties with their religious practices, however, the majority
    of Kurds in the conflict areas are Sunni Muslim.

    "I don't think in the last three and a half years we have seen
    100,000 cross in two days. So this is a bit of a measure of how this
    situation is unfolding, and the very deep fear people have about the
    circumstances inside Syria and for that matter, Iraq," Carol Batchelor,
    UNHCR's representative in Turkey said.

    The Kurds are in the majority in the autonomous region of Iraqi
    Kurdistan and are a significant minority group in the neighboring
    countries Turkey, Syria and Iran, where Kurdish nationalist movements
    continue to pursue (greater) autonomy.

    A US-led coalition has attempted to counter IS with increasingly
    intense air strikes for the past month.

    Source:
    http://newswire.net/newsroom/news/00085176-turkish-security-troops-clash-with-kurds-as-thousands-flee-isis.html

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