Credit: Reuters
Kurdish militants seized a Syrian border
post on the frontier with Iraq early on Saturday, fighters and monitors said,
after three days of clashes with an al Qaeda-linked group which had held the
crossing since March.
The armed Kurdish group YPG told Reuters fighting carried on
through the day and a senior security official on the Iraqi side of the
crossing said he could hear gunshots, mortar fire and shelling.
The Yarubiya post and surrounding areas in the northeast were
taken from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant rebel group, who had seized
it from the army, The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Ethnic Kurds in Syria have a complex role in nearly three years
of conflict that started when President Bashar al-Assad cracked down on a
pro-democracy uprising.
The ensuing civil war has pitted Sunni Muslims against Assad's
Alawite minority and different Kurdish militia have fought on both sides,
normally over territory or power disputes.
Kurdish YPG spokesman Redur Xelil told Reuters Kurdish areas in
Syria were blockaded by Islamist groups on one side, Turkish forces on the
other and the closed border with Iraqi Kurdistan. But he said it was "too
soon to talk about using the crossing".
International peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi said on Saturday peace
talks in Geneva next month should be attended by Assad's ally Iran.
Shi'ite Iran has strongly supported Assad, whose Alawite faith
is an offshoot of Shi'ism, while Saudi Arabia, other Gulf Arab states and the
United States support the rebels.
"We believe that the participation of Iran in the Geneva
conference is natural and necessary as well as fruitful, so we are hopeful that
this invitation is made," Lakhdar Brahimi told a news conference in
Tehran, according to Press TV, which translated his live remarks into English.
The U.S. State Department said on Oct. 7 that Washington would
be open to Iran taking part in a "Geneva 2" conference if it
supported the "Geneva 1" 2012 statement calling for a transitional
authority to rule Syria. Iran said it was "unacceptable to set
conditions" on its attendance.
Lebanon Clashes:
The Syrian war has caused two million to flee into neighbouring
countries and exacerbated regional sectarian divides.
At least 10 people were killed in street battles between Sunni
and Alawite militants in the Lebanese city of Tripoli on Friday and Saturday.
In Syria, 40 people died when a car bomb exploded outside a
mosque in Wadi Barada in Damascus province on Friday, said the anti-Assad
Observatory, which verifies reports through a network of sources around Syria.
State news agency SANA said many "terrorists" - a term
it uses for those fighting Assad - were killed in the explosion and quoted a
witness who said the mosque's two entrances collapsed when the bomber struck
before the end of Friday prayers.
State TV said on Friday Abu Mohammad al-Golani, leader of Jabhat
al-Nusra, a rebel group that has claimed responsibility for several suicide
bombings, had been killed.
Fighters from the Islamist group told Reuters Golani was alive.
The Syrian conflict has killed more than 100,000 people,
according to the United Nations.
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