Turkey border violence: Suicide blast kills five Kurdish border guards
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Five Kurdish border guards were killed in a blast in the
north-east Syrian city of Qamishli on Saturday 30 April. Kurdish news
website Rudaw said a suicide bomb had killed the five members of
Asayish, the Kurdish security organisation under the command of the
Kurdistan Regional Government, and wounded several others in the
Corniche area of the city.
The identity of the bomber has not yet been revealed, but violence on border posts in the region is not uncommon.
Many
refugees trying to escape violence in Syria have been abused or killed
by guards on both sides of the Turkey-Syria border, as documented by
alone while trying to cross from Syria into Turkey.
Tirana Hassan, crisis response director at Amnesty International, told IBT
"Turkey's highly selective practice is appalling — only severely
injured people are allowed entry to seek medical treatment while
everyone else fleeing the violence is left unprotected."
Qamishli has been a focal point of clashes between Syrian government
forces and Kurdish fighters. Most of the city is under Kurdish control,
with pockets controlled by the Syrian regime.
Fierce battles in April between the two sides prompted a truce
on 22 April, after an earlier ceasefire agreed in Geneva in February
failed to hold. A Syrian Kurdish official told Reuters that was the
second biggest outbreak of fighting between President Bashar al-Assad's
government and regional Kurdish forces since Syria's civil war began in
2011.
Kurdish groups voted in March 2016 to form an autonomous federation
in Northern Syria, mainly under the control of the Kurdish People's
Protection Units (YPG). Areas under Kurdish control in Iraq are also
trying to hold off against Isis, after they launched chemical weapons attacks in Kurdish areas.
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