http://www.reuters.com/article/2014/10/10/us-mideast-crisis-idUSKCN0HX0XF20141010
Thousands 'will most likely be massacred' if Kobani falls to jihadists,
U.N. warns

By Tom Miles
<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=tom.miles&;>
and Ayla Jean Yackley
<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=aylajeanyackley&;>

GENEVA/MURSITPINAR Turkey  Fri Oct 10, 2014 1:32pm EDT

1 of 7. Smoke rises after an U.S.-led air strike in the Syrian town of
Kobani Ocotber 10, 2014.

Credit: Reuters/Umit Bektas

(Reuters) - Thousands of people "will most likely be massacred" if Kobani
falls to Islamic State fighters, a U.N. envoy said on Friday, as militants
fought deeper into the besieged Syrian Kurdish town in full view of Turkish
tanks that have done nothing to intervene.

U.N. envoy Staffan de Mistura said Kobani could suffer the same fate as the
Bosnian town of Srebrenica, where 8,000 Muslims were murdered by Serbs in
1995, Europe's worst atrocity since World War Two, while U.N. peacekeepers
failed to protect them.

"If this falls, the 700, plus perhaps the 12,000 people, apart from the
fighters, will be most likely massacred," de Mistura said. The United
Nations believes 700 mainly elderly civilians are trapped in the town
itself and 12,000 have left the centre but not made it across the border
into Turkey.

"Do you remember Srebrenica? We do. We never forgot and probably we never
forgave ourselves," said de Mistura, the U.N. peace envoy for Syria. "When
there is an imminent threat to civilians, we cannot, we should not, be
silent."

The plight of mainly Kurdish Kobani has unleashed the worst street violence
in years in Turkey, which has 15 million Kurds of its own. Turkish Kurds
have risen up since Tuesday against President Tayyip Erdogan's government,
which they accuse of allowing their kin to be slaughtered.

At least 33 people have been killed in three days of riots across the
mainly Kurdish southeast, including two police officers shot dead in an
apparent attempt to assassinate a police chief. The police chief was
wounded.

Intense fighting between Islamic State fighters and outgunned Kurdish
forces in the streets of Kobani could be heard from across the border.
Warplanes roared overhead and the western edge of town was hit by an air
strike, apparently by U.S.-led coalition jets.

But even as Washington has increased its bombing of Islamic State targets
in the area, it has acknowledged that its air support is unlikely to be
enough to save the city from falling.

"TRAGIC REALITY"

"Our focus in Syria is in degrading the capacity of (Islamic State) at its
core to project power, to command itself, to sustain itself, to resource
itself," U.S. Deputy National Security Adviser Tony Blinken said. "The
tragic reality is that in the course of doing that there are going to be
places like Kobani where we may or may not be able to be effective."

Blinken said Islamic State controlled about 40 percent of Kobani. The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the war, gave a similar
estimate and said fighters had seized a central administrative area, known
as the "security quarter".

Ocalan Iso, deputy head of the Kurdish forces defending the town, told
Reuters that Islamic State fighters were still shelling the centre, which
proved it had not yet fallen.

"There are fierce clashes and they are bombing the centre of Kobani from
afar," he said, estimating the militants controlled 20 percent of the town.
He called for more U.S.-led air strikes.

The Middle East has been transformed in recent months by Islamic State, a
Sunni militant group that has seized swathes of Syria and Iraq, crucifying
and beheading prisoners and ordering non-Muslims and Shi'ites to convert or
die.

The United States has been building a military coalition to fight the
group, which requires intervening in both Iraq and Syria, countries with
complex multi-sided civil wars in which nearly every state in the region
has allies and enemies.

International attention has focused on Turkey, a NATO member with the
biggest army in the region, which has absorbed 1.2 million Syrian refugees,
including 200,000 from Kobani in the last few weeks. Erdogan has so far
refused to join the military coalition against Islamic State or use force
to protect Kobani.

"We would like to appeal to the Turkish authorities ... to allow the flow
of volunteers, at least, and their own equipment in order to be able to
enter the city and contribute to a self-defence action," the U.N. envoy de
Mistura said in Geneva.

"FIGHT TO LAST BREATH"

The Kurdish uprising in Turkey provoked a furious response from the Turkish
government, which accuses Kurdish political leaders of using the situation
in Kobani to destroy public order in Turkey and wreck its own delicate
peace process.

Turkish Kurds fought a decades-long insurgency in which 40,000 people were
killed. A truce last year has been one of the main achievements of
Erdogan's decade in power, but Abdullah Ocalan, jailed co-founder of the
Kurdish militant PKK, has said the peace process is doomed if Turkey
permits Kobani to fall.

In a televised speech on Friday, Erdogan accused Kurdish leaders of "making
calls for violence in a rotten way".

"I have put my hand, my body and my life into this peace process," he said.
"And I will continue to fight until my last breath to restore the
brotherhood of 77 million at any cost."

The three days of riots in southern Turkey were the worst street violence
in many years. The attempted assassination of a police chief in eastern
Bingol province was the first incident of its kind since 2001. The armed
wing of the PKK denied involvement in the attack.

The southeastern border province of Gaziantep saw some of the worst
violence overnight, with four people killed and 20 wounded as armed clashes
broke out between protesters calling for solidarity with Kobani and groups
opposing them.

GUNS AND SWORDS

Footage showed crowds with guns, swords and sticks roaming streets of
Gaziantep. Two local branches of the Kurdish People's Democratic Party
(HDP) there were torched, Dogan reported.

Selahattin Demirtas, co-chair of HDP, Turkey's main Kurdish party, has
called for calm and for protests to remain peaceful.

Many of Turkey's Kurds say the refusal to defend Kobani is proof the
government sees them as a bigger enemy than Islamic State. At the frontier,
dozens of Kurdish men watched Kobani's fighting from a hill where farmers
once tended pistachio trees.

"I believed in the peace process, because I didn't want any more children
to die. But the Kurds were fooled. The peace process was insincere. The
government either wants to wipe out Kurds or to enslave them," said Ahmet
Encu, 46, who came 500 km (300 miles) to watch Kobani, where four relatives
are fighting.

His own 12-year-old son was killed in 2011 when Turkish F-16s killed 34
Kurdish civilians who were smuggling cigarettes and fuel across the Iraqi
border.

"For two years, Erdogan has been cultivating Islamic State, at the same
time he was saying he wants to make peace. All along he has sought to
annihilate the PKK. Apo (Ocalan) made a mistake declaring a ceasefire," he
said.

One of those watching the fighting phoned a Kurdish soldier inside Kobani.
He said the man told him of heavy losses, with corpses lying in the streets.

Gulser Yildirim, a lawmaker with the pro-Kurdish HDP, gathered with a group
near a farmhouse to hold Friday prayers in view of the border. Men
completed ablutions from water pumped into an irrigation ditch. Yildirim
said she had spent 18 days along the border, watching Islamic State forces
steadily move westward towards Kobani, gaining about 30 km of territory.

"If this government still prefers these monsters, this gang called (Islamic
State) over Kurds with whom it is engaged in a peace process, what message
does that send Kurds about our chances of living together?" she said.

The U.S. State Department, which has been pressing Ankara to join the fight
against Islamic State, said Turkey had agreed to support efforts to arm and
train the moderate Syrian opposition.

Turkey says it would join an international coalition to fight against
Islamic State only if the alliance also confronts Syrian President Bashar
al-Assad's government. Erdogan wants a no-fly zone to prevent Assad's
planes from flying over the area near its border and a protected buffer
zone there for refugees.

Washington has said it is studying the idea but has made clear it is not an
option for now. Imposing a no-fly zone or buffer zone would require the
United States to take on the air force of Assad's government, which so far
has not objected to U.S. flights over Syrian territory to strike Islamic
State.

Blinken, the U.S. deputy national security adviser, said creating a buffer
zone is "not on the front burner".

(Additional reporting by Humeyra Pamuk
<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=humeyra.pamuk&;>,
Jonny Hogg and Seda Sezer in Turkey and Oliver Holmes
<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=oliver.holmes&;>
and Tom Perry
<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=thomas.perry&;>
in Beirut; Writing by Peter Graff
<http://blogs.reuters.com/search/journalist.php?edition=us&n=peter.graff&;>;
Editing by Sophie Walker)

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Peace Is Doable

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