AFP

Turkey on Friday reopened its border with Syria to Kurds fleeing Islamic State (IS) militants, saying a "worst-case scenario" could drive as many as 100,000 more refugees into the country.
Groups of visibly exhausted Syrian Kurds, most of them women and children who had fled their homes on foot, were shown on live television crossing into the southeastern Turkish village of Dikmetas, under tight security.
"We have taken in 4,000 brothers," Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu told reporters during a trip to Azerbaijan. "Their needs will be met. This is a humanitarian mission."
Ankara has given shelter to some 1.5 million refugees from the Syrian conflict under an open-door policy, but since Thursday had refused to accept more for fear of being overwhelmed by a new influx.
That move unleashed a rash of criticism in Turkey, as media reported on desperate Kurds massing on the Syrian side of the border after fleeing escalating clashes between IS and Kurdish fighters.  
Earlier on Friday security forces in Dikmetas fired tear gas and water cannon on protesters angry over the refusal to allow in new arrivals.
Deputy Prime Minister Numan Kurtulmus told CNN-Turk that IS jihadists in Syria had advanced to within seven or eight kilometres (4.4 to five miles) of Turkey.
He said 5,000 civilians had crossed into Turkey during the day, adding: "We have worked on a worse-case scenario which would see us subjected to an influx of more than 100,000 refugees".
 
A steady stream of refugees, their last remaining possessions in bags balanced on their heads, were seen on live television walking into Turkey.
Some women fainted from exhaustion and hunger. Children seated on their mothers' laps were handed food and water, while an elderly woman in a wheelchair waited behind a line of Turkish soldiers to cross over.
Weeping refugees recounted that IS militants had executed their relatives. Some explained that family members had been left behind to guard over their property.   
"God bless the Turkish government. They saved our lives, but what will happen to the rest of us back in Syria?" an elderly refugee told NTV television. 

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