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Daesh re-enters Syria’s Tal Abyad, takes district — monitor

By AFP - Jun 30,2015 - Last updated at Jun 30,2015

Wounded people arrive at a makeshift hospital in the rebel-held area of Douma, east of the Syrian capital Damascus, following reported air strikes by regime forces, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Daesh militants re-entered Syria’s Tal Abyad Tuesday, seizing a district from the Kurdish forces who captured the border town in a key victory two weeks ago, a monitor said.

“A cell of Islamic State [Daesh] fighters infiltrated Tal Abyad and took control of a district in the eastern outskirts of the town,” said Rami Abdel Rahman, director of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

“Kurdish fighters are trying to encircle the jihadists and prevent them from advancing further.”

He said fighting was continuing in the town, which lies on the border with Turkey. Tal Abyad was a crucial Daesh supply hub and stronghold for around a year before Kurdish forces expelled the group.

A spokesman for the Kurdish Protection Units (YPG), Redur Khalil, said that “several dozen” Daesh fighters had infiltrated an area under Kurdish control and that fighting was ongoing.

He had no immediate toll from the clashes.

“Daesh uses this method of infiltration to enter areas it was previously expelled from,” Khalil said.

The YPG, backed by Syrian rebel allies, seized Tal Abyad on June 16, just days after beginning an advance against the town.

The ground forces were backed by air strikes from the US-led coalition fighting Daesh in Syria and Iraq.

The battle for Tal Abyad prompted tens of thousands of refugees to flee across the border into Turkey, with the influx at times causing chaos.

But after YPG and rebel forces secured the town, many residents began to return from Turkey.

Kurdish forces have battled Daesh in several areas in the northern Syrian region along the border with Turkey.

In January, they secured the Kurdish border town of Kobani, which Daesh forces had been trying to capture for about four months.

Afterwards, the Kurds and their Arab allies began chipping away at Daesh territory in their stronghold province of Raqqa, where the jihadist group’s de facto Syrian capital is located.

But shortly after taking Tal Abyad from Daesh, the Kurds came under attack again in Kobani.

 

A group of Daesh fighters infiltrated the town after carrying out several car bomb attacks, and slaughtered more than 200 people inside over the course of two days before finally being pushed back out.

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