Assad Regime Enjoying Kobani Occupied By ISIS!

Freeman

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Sep 30, 2009
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It seems that the regime is enjoying seeing Daesh (ISIS) taking the city of Kobani and attacking Turkish borders.
Daesh terrorists have already kidnapped 49 Turkish and diplomat.
Turkey want to do land operation together with other countries against Daesh and imposing no-fly zone. The iranian mollahs and syrian regime don't want this action.
The question is:
Why syrian regime planes didn't act to protect Kobani city like they destroyed other cities?!
Does it the best proof of collaboration between the regime and Daesh who fight FSA and kurdish militants in the city?
 
Kobani beats back ISIS attack but still under siege...

ISIS in Syria: Kobani stood up to the jihadists and won - but it's still a city under siege
Sep 23, 2015, : Syrian Kurdish fighters won the greatest victory in Kurdish history in January when they defeated Isis - "Islamic State" - in the battle for the city of Kobani on the Syrian-Turkish border. One thousand YPG (People's Protection Unit) militiamen and several times that number of Isis militants were killed in the four-and-a-half month siege. Some 70 per cent of Kobani city was destroyed, mostly by US air strikes that turned buildings held by Isis into fragments of pulverised concrete.
But in one important sense the siege of Kobani has never ended because the city is in the Kurdish region of Syria, known to the Kurds as Rojava, which has been deliberately isolated from the outside world. The border crossing to Turkey is closed to everybody, aside from two days a week when Kurdish refugees are allowed to return to Kobani from Turkey. The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) in northern Iraq also limits the flow of people and goods in and out of Rojava, the quasi-state which has developed out of the three Syrian Kurdish enclaves, of which Kobani is one, just south of the Turkish border.

ISIS holds every other entry and exit point into Rojava, so the two million Kurds there are victims of a blockade on all sides which still claims its victims. Abdul Rahman Hamo, the general coordinator for Kobani's reconstruction, says that among those not allowed to enter Rojava from Turkey or KRG are desperately needed foreign de-mining experts with their specialised equipment. As Isis fighters retreated from Kobani City and the 380 villages around it, they left behind great numbers of mines and booby traps. "Some 48 of our people have been killed by mines in the last two months," says Mr Hamo.

"Many villages are still evacuated because they are full of mines that have not been defused." He estimates that there are 150,000 Kurds in Turkey who would like to come home "but they are scared of the mines". The YPG tried defusing the mines itself, but lacked the training and equipment necessary to do so without excessive risk. "We lost four of our men," says Mr Hamo. "Foreign NGOs have their own de-mining devices, but Turkey and the KRG does not allow them in."

The same blockade is preventing the entry of equipment needed to remove the great mounds of shattered concrete in Kobani. The streets we drove down were generally clear, but the buildings on either side of us had often been turned into giant concrete sandwiches as floors had concertinaed on top of each other. Mr Hamo said: "We have taken away 60,000 truck-loads of debris each weighing 20 tons, but that is only 40 per cent of the work".

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ISIS beheads famous archaeologist in Syria and hangs his body on a column at a historic site
Aug 19, 2015: Islamic State militants beheaded one of Syria's most prominent antiquities scholars in the ancient town of Palmyra, then strapped his body from one of the town's Roman columns, Syrian state media and an activist group said on Wednesday.
The killing of 81-year-old Khaled al-Asaad was the latest atrocity perpetrated by the militant group, which has captured a third of both Syria and Iraq. Since IS overran Palmyra in May, there have been fears the extremists, who have destroyed famed archaeological sites in Iraq, would demolish its 2,000-year-old Roman-era city at the town's edge, one of the mideast's most spectacular archaeological sites.

According to Syrian state news agency SANA and the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, al-Assad was beheaded on Tuesday in a square outside the town's museum. The Observatory, which has a network of activists on the ground in Syria, said dozens of people gathered to witness the killing. Al-Asaad had been held by the IS for about a month, it added. His body was then taken to Palmyra's archaeological site and hung from one of the Roman columns, Maamoun Abdulkarim, the head of the Antiquities and Museums Department in Damascus, told SANA.

Al-Asaad was "one of the most important pioneers in Syrian archaeology in the 20th century," Abdulkarim said. IS had tried to extract information from him about where some of the town's treasures had been hidden to save them from the militants, the antiquities chief also said. SANA said al-Asaad had been in charge of Palmyra's archaeological site for four decades until 2003, when he retired. After retiring, al-Asaad worked as an expert with the Antiquities and Museums Department.

Since falling to IS, Palmyra's ancient site has remained intact but the militants destroyed a lion statue in the town dating back to the 2nd century. The statue, discovered in 1975, had stood at the gates of the town museum, and had been placed inside a metal box to protect it from damage. In early July, IS released a video showing the killing of some 20 captured government soldiers in Palmyra's amphitheatre. They were shot dead by young IS members, armed with pistols. Hundreds of people were seen watching the killings.

ISIS beheads famous archaeologist in Syria and hangs his body on a column at a historic site - The Times of India
 
It seems that the regime is enjoying seeing Daesh (ISIS) taking the city of Kobani and attacking Turkish borders.
Daesh terrorists have already kidnapped 49 Turkish and diplomat.
Turkey want to do land operation together with other countries against Daesh and imposing no-fly zone. The iranian mollahs and syrian regime don't want this action.
The question is:
Why syrian regime planes didn't act to protect Kobani city like they destroyed other cities?!
Does it the best proof of collaboration between the regime and Daesh who fight FSA and kurdish militants in the city?
You stupid Al-Qaeda monkey don´t understand that
1. Turkey/West has no rebels to be protected in a zone.
2. Turkey is not hindering ISIS from taking over that zone.

You are instead babbling your usual nonsense.
 

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