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Showing posts with label Ayn al-Arab. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Ayn al-Arab. Show all posts

Saturday, March 7, 2015

41 #Daeshbags killed Kobane County

I know  a lot of people think Kobane is clean of ISIS. While the City of Kobane has been cleared except the occasional suicide bomber. But Kobane County is still being cleaned up of ISIS #Daeshbags.
People’s Protection Units killed 41 of mercenaries Daash in Kobanî County, and was able to grab as many military weapons and ammunition, as well as on the impact of the body of 12 units in the hands of a mercenary protection.
People’s Protection Units killed 41 of mercenaries Daash in Kobanî County, and was able to grab as many military weapons and ammunition, as well as on the impact of the body of 12 units in the hands of a mercenary protection.
Contacted news agency Hawar of clashes in the area Kobanî County reported that the People’s Protection Units after the liberation of the town elders hypospadias, located on the western side of the county, a sweep launched in the town and was able to control the entire town.
Correspondence and confirmed that clashes broke out strong in the southeast in the cement quarry, between the People’s Protection Units and mercenaries Daash, and expect as a result was able protection modules Edit quarry full of mercenaries. Also killed in the quarry 30 mercenary body 12 of them in the hands of protection modules. It also detonated a car protection units of mercenaries.
And managed protection modules of the seizure of many weapons and military ammunition and weapons, including pixie 0.8 Claenchenkov, sniper.
In the village of Aqpash located in the southeastern and protection units carried out an operation against mercenaries and managed to kill Mrtezkin.
Protection modules also carried out an operation in the village of evil, located in the southeastern and expect as a result killed three mercenaries.
On the same morning attacked the mercenaries Daash Euphrates River and confronted them with units protect the people, and expect as a result clashes erupted and killed 6 mercenary

Thursday, February 19, 2015

The Rojava revolution in Syria


Kurds







THE ROJAVA REVOLUTION IN SYRIA


From the chaos of the Syrian Revolution the existence of a radical experiment in democracy has slowly emerged. The project in Rojava, in the north of Syria, has been instigated by the Democratic Union Party (the PYD) and its militias the People’s Protection Units (The YPG), and the all-female Women’s Protection Units (The YPJ), in alliance with the Turkish Kurdistan Workers’ Party (the PKK). The PKK itself appears to have experienced its own (r)evolution, with the conversion of its leader Abdullah Ocalan, imprisoned by the Turks since 1999, away from the desire to create a Kurdish State and instead adopting an idea of “libertarian municipalism” inspired by social ecologist Murray Bookchin. Instead of a highly centralised state, which was once its aim, the PKK now claims that it sees its aims for the Kurds to be living in free, self-governing communities, based on direct democracy and paying no heed to national borders.[i]
Three non-contiguous autonomous areas or cantons, Efrin, Cizire, and Kobane, have been set up. In every canton there exists a Legislative Assembly, an Executive Assembly, a Constitutional Assembly, and Regional Assemblies, as proscribed under a written collective political structure (the Social Contract).[ii] Delegates to the Assemblies are elected with an ethnic balance reflecting the population of the area, and guaranteeing a 40 per cent female presence, and a model of co-presidency means each political entity always has both a female and a male president.
RoyavaCantonsAfter visiting the area in December 2014, Janet Biehl described how power flows from the bottom upwards in this system through several tiers, namely the neighbourhood, district, city, and canton. All levels are made up of delegates whose role is only to convey the wishes of the people to the next level up.[iii] Saleh Muslim Mohamed, co-president of the PYD, has described how this system is leading to the education and politicising of the people, “You have to reject the idea that you have to wait for some leader to come and tell the people what to do,” he explains, “and instead learn to exercise self-rule as a collective practice…The people themselves educate each other. When you put 10 people together and ask them for a solution to a problem or propose them a question, they collectively look for an answer. I believe in this way they will find the right one. This collective discussion will make them politicised.”[iv]

Kurds
“Free Kurds do not recognize borders”. Image from http://roarmag.org/2014/07/rojava-autonomy-syrian-kurds/
Some anarchists have dismissed the experiment as merely another statist project creating a new ruling class and government. The link with the PKK in particular has meant that the situation has been problematic for some; for example, the Anarchist Federation has criticised Ocalan’s Stalinist past and doubted his commitment to radical democracy, and anti-capitalist ideas.[v] Also, they point out the negative aspects of a planned dual structure which would see the assemblies running alongside a parliament based along western democratic lines.
Other commentators though, notably the anarchist anthropologist David Graeber, have been more accepting of the project, and argued that it is revolutionary and offering an example to an alternative way of organising the world.[vi]   There is also a viewpoint that while the Rojavan project may not be anarchist, it is worthy of support for it’s democratic confederalism opens up space for further changes, and could be inspiring for rebels elsewhere.[vii]
This is an incredibly brief overview of a situation that has generated a huge amount of words over the last few weeks. Arguments have been flowing back and forth over the question of whether anarchists should be supportive of the Rojava project. For those interested, the resources below may help shed some light on the various discussions and points of view.

Further reading:

About

Useful article describing the workings of the democratic confederalism of Rojava:
Regular news from the Revolution in Rojava and Wider Kurdistan:
A link to a book length examination of Rojava based around interviews by members of a solidarity group who briefly visited the area in 2011, which, while being clearly from a perspective sympathetic to the PKK, provide thought provoking glimpses into the practical implementation of a new left vision:
A couple of useful articles giving an overview and explanation of the adoption of Bookchin’s ideas by the PKK under Ocalan’s direction and a brief sketch of their implementation in Rojava:

 Local anarchist perspective

An interview with the Kurdish Anarchist Forum:
The interview can also be found in issue 12 of Imminent Rebellion:

 Anarchists supporting the project

An interview with David Graeber, the anarchist anthropologist, championing the Rojava project:
More from Graeber with his examples of how he sees the Rojava revolution as being anti-capitalist:
An ‘Anarchist Communist’ reply to the Workers Solidarity Alliance (WSA) article below:

Anarchists critical of the project

An article casting aspersions on the true revolutionary nature of the Rojava situation:
A critical article recently published on the Ideas and Action website of the North America-based Workers Solidarity Alliance (WSA):
Various articles on Rojava, OcalanBookchin and Ocalan, by Janet Biel, including useful sociological and historical background:

 Further reading:

If you appetite is whetted then heaps more resources are listed here:

References:

[iv] In an interview with Green Left Weeklyhttps://www.greenleft.org.au/node/57795 [Last accessed 06/01/2014]
[vii] http://www.anarkismo.net/article/27540 [Last accessed 06/01/2014]

Tuesday, February 17, 2015

Kurdish YPG forces invade Islamic State's Raqqa stronghold

Lalish - Kurdistan - Yazidi holy city

Kurdish YPG forces have seized a hill inside the Syrian province of Raqqa, the Islamic State (Isis) Syrian stronghold, after deadly clashes.
Kurdish troops have taken Baghdak Hill south of the border town Kobani which is situated within Raqqa province. IS has been driven from Kobani by the YPG and the all-female YPJ Kurdish forces, and assisted by US-led air strikes.
YPG YPJ and FSA fighters form a joint command to attack ISIS in Raqqa
The jihadist group established its de facto capital in the city of Raqqa last year after seizing vast swaths of land straddling between Iraq and Syria. In recent months the city has been pounded by warplanes from the US-led coalition.
At least 35 IS fighters and four YPG members had been killed on Sunday (15 February) in fighting near Kobani.
The Kurds have taken over at least 163 villages around the border of Kobane, which became key in the international efforts to defeat IS. Several hundred rebel fighters joined the Kurds in their effort against the Sunni militants.
The #YPG press centre claimed that 18 Daesh / ISIS / ISIL militants were captured alive.

Saturday, February 14, 2015

Kobani - now facing another difficult battle

A Kurdish sniper looks down on the Syrian city of Kobani on January 30, 2015, a few days after ISIS withdrew from the city.  (AP Photo, File)
A Kurdish sniper looks down on the Syrian city of Kobani on January 30, 2015, a few days after ISIS withdrew from the city.  (AP Photo, File)
Erbil, Asharq Al-Awsat—After four months of incessant fighting, the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) has finally been driven out of Kobani, but with much of the Syrian border town in ruins and its population dispersed, the fight for the future of the city has just begun.
Relief and celebration over ISIS’ withdrawal at the end of January have been replaced with shock and warnings of an impending humanitarian disaster in the town as residents return to a city that is dangerously uninhabitable.
Those who recently returned to Kobani have described appalling conditions: In the path of ISIS’ retreat, the extremist militants left behind booby-trapped houses, bombs and mines. Local residents told Asharq Al-Awsat that the bodies of hundreds of ISIS fighters are buried beneath the rumble and medical authorities warned of an epidemic when these bodies begin to decompose, with the town sorely lacking in medical expertise and supplies.
Ezzedine Tammo, a Kurdish military doctor affiliated with the YPG, warned of the rapid spread of disease in the border city unless something is done immediately. He told Asharq Al-Awsat: “The bodies of ISIS fighters can be found in the rubble of every destroyed building in Kobani. These bodies have not begun to decompose due to the extremely cold weather. However, during the coming period, we can expect temperatures to increase and for an epidemic to break out. So we must be aware of this impending humanitarian disaster and think about how to safely remove these bodies.”
Kobani’s medical facilities were blown to pieces in the fighting. The main hospital is now an empty shell. When Iraqi Peshmerga forces first joined the fight in Kobani in November last year the only source of medical assistance was from a small but well-equipped health center across the border in Turkey. Not long after, ISIS attacked and completely destroyed the medical center in what represented a significant blow to the Kurdish forces. Although the Iraqi Kurdish forces brought their own medical experts and supplies with them to help in the war effort, it is unlikely that these limited medical capabilities will be able to deal with a city-wide epidemic.
“After the health center was destroyed, we established a field hospital in the basement of one of the schools in the west of the city. This area had seen the least destruction as it has been under the control of Kurdish forces throughout the conflict. This field hospital provided health care for YPG fighters and local residents alike, relying on external medical assistance,” Tammo said.
The anti-ISIS forces have sought, in recent weeks and months, to expand their medical facilities, receiving several batches of medical assistance from Erbil and establishing a Kurdish Red Crescent operation in the town. While these attempts have proven successful on the small scale, a post-ISIS Kobani will need much greater assistance.
“We will have a bigger problem when Kobani residents who fled the fighting start to return. We will need far greater medical assistance than we are currently receiving. We will also need more to establish new health centers and hospitals, and more doctors and nurses to staff them, in order to care for the returning residents,” he added.
Even the most basic of needs is lacking and it will take many months, and even years to make the city habitable once again. Senior Kobani official Idris Nassan reiterated calls for international humanitarian assistance. He told Asharq Al-Awsat: “Currently, there is a dangerous lack of food, and we are depending on some limited supplies from relief organizations that enter Kobani via Turkey in an unofficial manner, as well as the limited food stocks and supplies in warehouses and homes.”
“Our water supplies have also been cut off and so we are telling residents to rely on well water, even though this water is contaminated after the massive bombing campaigns affected the water table,” he added.
Nassan painted a bleak picture of life inside the city, with bodies putrefying, residents hungry and thirsty, and unexploded mines still representing a grave threat to life. Despite the scenes of joy among Kobani refugees following the ISIS withdrawal, the Kobani official said residents should not rush back.
“We are trying to attract the world’s attention to the humanitarian disaster that is brewing in Kobani. The town needs to see the establishment of an international humanitarian bridge via Turkey to allow food and medicine to be delivered to the town’s residents . . . but Ankara is not taking any genuine steps to secure this,” he said.
“We are seeing dozens of Kobani residents returning on a daily basis. They are eager to return as soon as possible, but before we can officially permit the mass return of residents, we must ensure that we will be able to provide them with the basic services that they require, including food and medicine,” Nassan added.
Kobani had a population of around 50,000 prior to the Syrian conflict, as the war dragged on this number expanded to more than 200,000 with Syrians arriving from conflict zones across the country. When the fight reached the border town in September, its residents were forced to flee once again.
The current population of the city stands at approximately 15,000, Tammo said, although returnees are pushing that number up on a daily basis.
“We have also seen hundreds of Kobani youth return and they are eager to participate in the operations to restore life and basic services to the city,” he added.
With spring fast approaching, and Kobani residents returning on a daily basis, stretching the already limited capabilities of the town’s authorities, what is certain is that Kobani needs help. And it needs it now.

Original post click here

Saturday, January 31, 2015

Commission set up to rebuild Kobanê


ANF - KOBANÊ 30.01.2015 15:00:15 Following the liberation of Kobanê on the 134th day of the resistance against ISIS gangs, the Kobanê Canton administration has held a meeting to take effective decisions for the rebuilding of the war-torn city, while the operations of YPG/YPJ forces to liberate the villages continue. The executives of the Canton held a press conference at the Azadiya Square to announce the decisions taken for the rebuilding process. Kobanê Canton Prime Minister Enwer Müslim said a commission had been set up to carry out a survey across the urban area to assess the scope of the damage and to determine the needs of rebuilding as well as to conduct international relations. “The liberation of Kobanê coincides with the first anniversary of its being declared an autonomous canton. We have achieved victory, and have set up a commission to determine and assess the scope of the damage and to start a process of rebuilding”, said the Kobanê PM, adding that the commission consists of engineers and other experts in urban planning. Müslim said the commission will be in touch with international NGOs as well as states, adding that they expect aid and support for the rebuilding of Kobanê, where victory had been gained in the war for the defence of the values of humanity. Enwer Müslim called on all NGOs and aid organisations to provide support and to send aid for the rebuilding process in Kobanê.

Wednesday, January 28, 2015

Iraq forces 'liberate' Diyala province from IS / Daesh



Muqdadiyah (Iraq) (AFP) - Iraqi forces have "liberated" Diyala province from the Islamic State jihadist group, retaking all populated areas of the eastern region, a top army officer said on Monday.

The symbolic victory for Baghdad, which has at times struggled to push IS back, could clear the way for further advances against the jihadists
"We announce the liberation of Diyala from the (IS) organisation," Staff Lieutenant General Abdulamir al-Zaidi said.
Iraqi forces have regained "complete control of all the cities and districts and subdistricts of Diyala province," he said.
Diyala has seen months of fighting, especially in the Jalawla and Saadiyah areas in the province's north, which were held by IS, and areas near the town of Muqdadiyah, which the militants repeatedly attacked but never took.
The last battle for a populated part of the province began last Friday in an area of villages near Muqdadiyah, northeast of Diyala capital Baquba.
Zaidi and district council chief Adnan al-Tamimi both said that Iraqi forces are now in control of the entire area.
Zaidi said that 58 members of pro-government forces were killed and 248 were wounded in the fighting, while "more than 50" IS fighters died.
He added that there are thousands of bombs left behind by IS in villages north of Muqdadiyah, which will be a major challenge to clear.
The general said that there will still be further fighting against IS in the rural Hamreen mountains, which stretch across multiple provinces, including Diyala.
The victory could see more forces brought to neighbouring Salaheddin province, potentially including militant-held Tikrit.
IS spearheaded a militant offensive that began in the northern city of Mosul in June and swept down to overrun much of Iraq's Sunni Arab heartland.
Iraqi federal forces, Kurdish troops, Shiite militiamen and Sunni tribesmen are all fighting against the jihadists in various parts of the country.
A US-led coalition is carrying out air strikes against IS in both Iraq and neighbouring Syria, and also advising and training Iraqi forces.
Monday's announcement does not mean the problem of violence in Diyala -- which suffered from frequent attacks even before the IS drive -- is over.
Much will depend on how well Iraqi forces are able to hold retaken territory and efforts to reconstruct areas damaged by the fighting.

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Sunday, January 11, 2015

INSIDE KOBANI 25 min Video on Front lines

I love this video!
Always great to see the Brave Kurds who seem to be the only people fighting ISIS. What we need now is western backing for the Kurds.

#kobani under siege by #ISIS terrorists #Daesh and #kobane defenders the #YPG and #YPJ barve #Kurds Kurdistan Kurdish Nation. Syrian town ayn al-Arab, Syria on #Turkey boarder.

Thursday, December 4, 2014

Was The Vice Documentary on ISIS Biased?

This video talks about Videos and articles published by "Vice" magazine. The articles and videos tend to seem like they are glorifying ISIS. The vice representative is shown on an english speaking channel and it is clear that while he says he does not support ISIS it is clear he does seem to think they are the cats meow. It is idiots like this we need to silence or at least counter their propaganda. - Ian Bach

isis, #isis, syria, kobani, kobane, ayn al-arab, kurds, kurdish, kurd, 

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

Germany sends arms to Kurd fighters battling ISIL in Iraq


  Published on Sep 25, 2014
Germany has sent off military equipment to help Kurdish fighters in their battle with ISIL forces in Iraq.

This breaks a post-World War Two taboo on sending weapons to active conflict zones.

A military transport plane has taken off from Leipzig.

German army Lieutenant-Colonel Christoph Von Loewenstern said: "This is the first of several flights until the beginning of October. They will
probably also take off from Leipzig-Halle. Today 60 tonnes of weapons and  ammunition are concerned."

In t…
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Tuesday, December 2, 2014

Syria Claims Terror Groups Used Chlorine as a Weapon

During a meeting of the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons, Syria’s Vice Foreign Minister Faysal Mekdad "denied his government ever used chemical weapons or chlorine and warned that terror groups are using such weapons," AP reports.

The meeting came as the OPCW is close to fully eliminating Syria’s deadly chemical stockpile.
According to Mekdad, terrorist groups "have used chlorine gas in several of the regions of Syria and Iraq."
In October, Iraqi officials said the Islamic State group had used chlorine gas north of Baghdad. The claim came days after Kurdish officials and doctors said they had reason to believe ISIS used some form of toxic gas in Kobani.
‘Angela Kane, the United Nations' disarmament chief, acknowledged the new risks posed by terrorists,' the AP reports.
"There is a very distinct threat that has arisen and actually also is being investigated by the OPCW with a fact-finding mission," she said.

U.S. Rules Out No-Fly Zone Proposal Along Syria-Turkey Border

"The U.S. played down the idea of creating a buffer zone along the Syria-Turkish border Monday, after a media report cited it as a possible concession to Turkey in return for the use of bases to launch attacks on ISIS militants in Syria," Reuters reports.
isis #ISIS