"According to Sharia law" and goes on to describe slavery as a type of pathway to Islam.

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Refugees in Suruc, Turkey, have spoken of the atrocities witnessed in Kobani


James Rush

Monday 13 October 2014


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Survivors of the fighting in Kobani have spoken of the horrors they witnessed as Isis militants took control of parts of the town from Kurdish forces.


Refugees in Suruc, Tukey, have told The Daily Mail how relatives and neighbours were beheaded by the militants, while another spoke of how he had seen "hundreds" of decapitated corpses in the besieged town.

On Friday, the UN Syria envoy warned the hundreds still trapped in Kobani will be "massacred" by militants if the town falls, where only a small corridor remains open for people to flee.

More than 200,000 have already escaped across the border to Turkey but up to 700 remain inside the town.

The battle for the Syrian town has also sparked major protests in Turkey against its perceived inaction. Kurdish protesters have repeatedly clashed with security forces, leaving at least 31 people, including two police officers, dead.

Amin Fajar, 38, a father-of-four who left Kobani and made it across the border and into Suruc, told The Daily Mail: "I have seen tens, maybe hundreds, of bodies with their heads cut off.

In pictures: Fighting between Kurds and Isis intensifies in Kobani


"Others with just their hands or legs missing. I have seen faces with their eyes or tongues cut out – I can never forget it for as long as I live."

Isis militants have laid siege to the town of Kobani for nearly four weeks and fought their way into it in recent days.

They have reportedly taken control of almost half of the town.

Belal Shahin, another Kobani refugee in Suruc, told MSNBC: “Isis came into the villages. They beheaded people as well as animals. They took animals and girls; they left nothing. Even animals don’t do what Isis are doing. They are doing these things and it’s not acceptable.

"But the whole world has blocked their ears in order not to hear. And they’ve become dumb. There’s nothing to stop them."


As night fell on Sunday, the town centre of Kobani was under heavy artillery and mortar fire, Ocalan Iso, deputy head of the Kobani defence council, told Reuters.

Heavy clashes were under way in the east and southeast, he said, with neither side gaining ground.

Idris Nassan, deputy foreign minister in the Kurdish administration for the Kobani district, said heavy fighting had begun around nightfall in the streets.

Kurdish fighters had caught attackers in an ambush, he said.

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Kurdish refugees fleeing Kobani enter Turkey at Suruc

After days of advances by Isis, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said Kobani's Kurdish defenders had managed to hold their ground.

The Observatory said 36 Islamic State fighters, all foreigners, were killed the previous day, while eight Kurdish fighters had died. The figures could not be independently verified.

The news comes as a video emerged over the weekend apparently showing fighting in the streets of Kobani.

The Independent has not been able to independently verify the video, but Isis expert Shiraz Maher said it appeared to have been made for "propaganda purposes, ostensibly demonstrating the group's strength and prowess."

A Turkish official today said there was no new agreement with the United States on using an air base in southern Turkey for operations against the Islamic State group.

Turkey and the US are still talking about the Incirlik air base as well as Turkish demands for the creation of a no-fly zone and a safe haven for refugees, the government official told the Associated Press.

On Sunday, United States defence officials said Turkey would let US and coalition forces use its bases against Islamic State militants.

Additional reporting by Reuters and Associated Press
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...t-the-savagery-of-isis-laid-bare-9791199.html

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13 October 2014 Last updated at 19:20 ET
Shia militias 'killing Iraqi Sunnis in reprisal attacks'
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Shia militias have been at the forefront of the fight against IS in Iraq
Continue reading the main story
Struggle for Iraq
Shia militias in Iraq have kidnapped and killed scores of Sunni civilians in recent months, a report by campaign group Amnesty International has said.

The killings were in apparent revenge for attacks by Islamic State (IS).

Amnesty said the militias had been supported and armed by the Iraqi government and operated with impunity.

Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, who took office last month, has admitted to previous "excesses" by security forces and vowed to govern for all Iraqis.

He has not yet commented directly on allegations contained in the Amnesty report but has previously said Iraq faces an "existential" battle against militants from Islamic State, also known as Isis or Isil.

Mr Abadi has also acknowledged, in what is believed to be a reference to Sunnis, that his government must address the "legitimate grievances" of the Iraqi people.

Yazidis enslaved
The accusations against Shia militias in Iraq come two days after IS confirmed, in the latest issue of its propaganda magazine Dabiq, that it had captured and enslaved women and children from the Yazidi minority.

It said the women and children were seized around the town of Sinjar in northern Iraq and "were then divided according to the Sharia amongst the fighters of the Islamic State who participated in the... operations".

Some of the women were subsequently "sold", the magazine said.

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Many Yazidis fled from their homes around Sinjar in August; an unknown number were captured by IS
The Amnesty report, based on interviews conducted in Iraq in August and September, provides details of what it says were sectarian attacks carried out by militiamen in the cities of Baghdad, Samarra and Kirkuk.

It says scores of unidentified bodies have been found, many still handcuffed and with gunshot wounds to the head, suggesting execution-style killings. Many others who disappeared remain unaccounted for.

Amnesty says that in Samarra, a mainly Sunni city north of Baghdad, it obtained details of more than 170 Sunni men abducted since June.

More than 30 were taken from or near their homes in a single day - 6 June - shot dead and their bodies dumped nearby.

"The killing spree seems to have been in reprisal for a brief incursion into the city the previous day" by IS fighters, Amnesty says.

'Blind revenge'
Amnesty says the militias - including Asa'ib Ahl al-Haq, the Badr Brigades, the Mahdi Army and Kata'ib Hizbullah - have become more powerful since June, when the Iraqi army fell into disarray in the face of IS advances.

Correspondents say much of the fighting against IS since then has been carried out by militias, who were able to recruit thousands of volunteers, rather than the army.

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Many Shia men volunteered to fight IS; there is no suggestion any of those pictured in this article have been involved in killing civilians
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Shia militias have carried out much of the fighting against IS after the Iraqi army's retreat
There are now "tens of thousands" of militiamen, who "wear military uniforms but operate outside any legal framework and without any official oversight", Amnesty says.

The report quotes an unidentified Iraqi government official as saying that militias "mostly... kidnap Sunnis, because the victims can easily be labelled as terrorists and nobody is going to do anything about it".

Another unnamed government official said some Sunni men were considered to be "terrorists or terrorist supporters" because of where they lived. Others were killed "in blind revenge".

"I'm afraid that we're regressing back to the situation as it was seven or eight years ago, when this behaviour was very widespread," he said.

Militiamen have also tried to extort ransoms, sometimes killing their captives even after payments have been made, Amnesty said.

"I begged friends and acquaintances to lend me the ransom money to save my son but after I paid they killed him and now I have no way to pay back the money I borrowed, as my son was the only one working in the family," one mother said.

Amnesty says the militias have taken advantage of an "atmosphere of lawlessness" but the Iraqi government, which has armed and supported them, bears responsibility for their actions.

"By granting its blessing to militias who routinely commit such abhorrent abuses, the Iraqi government is sanctioning war crimes and fuelling a dangerous cycle of sectarian violence," said Amnesty's senior crisis response adviser, Donatella Rovera.

"The new Iraqi government... must act now to rein in the militias and establish the rule of law."


http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-29603272



peace won't be coming anytime soon @Broke Wave
 

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3 October 2014 Last updated at 14:29 ET
Iraq crisis: 180,000 flee IS advance in Anbar, UN says
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Iraqi troops have already clashed with IS fighters on the outskirts of Ramadi
Continue reading the main story
Islamic State
As many as 180,000 people have fled fighting between Iraqi forces and Islamic State (IS) militants in and around the city of Hit in western Anbar province, the UN says.

The civilians - many of whom were already displaced - have headed east towards the war-torn city of Ramadi.

The UN says the refugees are in need of food, blankets and medical supplies.

IS captured Hit earlier this month in an advance across Anbar that has alarmed Iraqi leaders.

Analysts say seizing Anbar would enable IS to establish a supply line to launch possible attacks on the Iraqi capital, Baghdad.

In other developments:

  • At least 25 people are killed in a spate of bomb blasts in predominantly Shia areas of the capital, Baghdad
  • UK Foreign Secretary Phillip Hammond, on his first official visit to Baghdad, says Iraqi forces will have to take the lead in fighting IS on the ground
  • The US says Turkey has agreed to allow moderate Syrian rebels to be trained on its soil in its bid to combat IS
The US-led coalition that is battling IS has carried out air strikes on the area around Hit.

However, Iraqi security officials said on Monday that IS had overrun a military base the Iraqi army had abandoned about 8km (five miles) west of the city.

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They took military vehicles, including tanks, and then set the camp ablaze, they said.

On Saturday, officials in Anbar appealed for military help, saying the province was in danger of falling to IS.

Anbar's provincial council asked the Iraqi government for US ground troops, Iraq's al-Sharqiyah TV reported.

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has repeatedly ruled out any foreign ground troops in Iraq.

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John Simpson on the IS front line with the Iraqi army

US Secretary of State John Kerry also said in Cairo at the weekend that Iraqis would have to do the fighting on the ground.

"Ultimately it is Iraqis who will have to take back Iraq," he said. "It is Iraqis in Anbar who will have to fight for Anbar."

The province is home to Iraq's second-largest dam, the Haditha, which controls the flow of the Euphrates to southern Iraq.

IS already controls large swathes of territory across Syria and Iraq.

Sold into slavery
"Reports indicate that 30,000 families, or approximately 180,000 individuals... many experiencing their second, third or fourth displacement, have left the city (Hit) in the past few days," a statement from the UN's Office for the Co-ordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OHCA) says.

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One fighter battling IS in Kobane: 'There is no time for sleep'

"The displaced dispersed to Ramadi, Khaldiya, Hajaj and Amiryah Rahaliya. Many fled in vehicles taking basic household items and found refuge with other IDPs (internally displaced persons) in public buildings, such as schools."

Meanwhile, an article in IS's online magazine Daqib said that Yazidi families have been sold into slavery by the group.

The Yazidi people lived in an area of north-west Iraq overrun by IS fighters in August.

The article says the people were divided among IS fighters "according to Sharia law" and goes on to describe slavery as a type of pathway to Islam.

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Street fighting is taking place in Kobane and US-led air strikes are targeting IS
A recent Human Rights Watch report said IS had systematically separated captured women and girls from their families and forced some to marry its fighters.

Reports of atrocities have also come from the northern Syrian town of Kobane where IS fighters are battling Kurdish forces.

Witnesses have reported IS fighters beheading civilians trying to flee to safety.

Kobane official Feyza Abdi, who is now a refugee in Turkey, said IS had control of the town to the south, east and west, and warned of a "massacre" if they took the northern front bordering Turkey.

"That is what they want, to completely enclose the town, cut off all contact with Turkey and engage in barbarism," he said.

Kurdish forces say they urgently need more weapons and ammunition to push back the militants' advance in the town.

The Pentagon said on Monday that US and Saudi warplanes had carried out eight air strikes in the past 24 hours against IS positions around Kobane.


http://www.bbc.com/news/world-middle-east-29606089


:why:


these people aren't human
 

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SLAVERY huh.......

pathway to islam according to sharia law huh?:violent: meanwhile no one does nothing about it...
 
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