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16 killed in suicide attack on Kurdish forces in Syria

16 killed in suicide attack on Kurdish forces in Syria

August 20, 2015 | 01:25 AM

A member of the Kurdish security forces walks at the site of the suicide bomb attack in Qamishli yesterday.

AFPBeirutA suicide bomber killed at least 16 people yesterday in an attack on Kurdish security forces in northeastern Syria claimed by the Islamic State group, a monitor said. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the blast in the city of Qamishli killed 10 members of the Kurdish forces, called the Asayish, and six civilians. “A suicide bomber in a vehicle targeted the Asayish’s local headquarters in Qamishli,” said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the British-based Observatory. IS claimed the attack in an online statement, saying a suicide bomber had used a “water tanker rigged with explosives to infiltrate an Asayish command base”. Syrian Kurdish militia have been some of the most successful forces fighting IS in northern parts of the country.  The militant group has targeted Qamishli and other Kurdish bastions with suicide operations in the past. Abdel Rahman described yesterday’s explosion as “massive” and said at least 14 civilians had been wounded. The charred wreckage of several vehicles was seen at the site of the blast in the industrial district of Qamishli, a majority-Kurdish city in Syria’s northeastern province of Hasakeh. Syria’s state news agency Sana said 15 people were killed but did not specify whether they included civilians. It said 50 people were wounded. Arin Shekhmos, a local journalist in Qamishli, said the blast could be heard throughout the city. “I wasn’t close, but I could hear it from where I was,” Shekhmos said by telephone shortly after visiting the blast site. “There is a lot of destruction—the buildings on at least two streets have been completely destroyed,” he said. Syria’s conflict, which began in March 2011, evolved from peaceful demonstrations to a multi-front war involving Kurds, rebels, Islamist militants and the regime. Both pro-regime and opposition forces have been criticised by human rights groups for indiscriminate attacks that have killed civilians. Yesterday, aerial bombardment by the government of a rebel stronghold east of Damascus left at least 10 people dead, the Observatory said. The attacks on Harasta, in the Eastern Ghouta region, killed members of the town’s council, civil defence, and police force, it said.

August 20, 2015 | 01:25 AM