Image: AP/Press Association Images
KURDISH FIGHTERS BACKED by US-led coalition air strikes were locked in fierce fighting today to prevent a key Syrian border town falling into the hands of Islamic State group jihadists.
It came as 41 children were reported dead in twin bombings that hit a school in the government-controlled central city of Homs, which has been devastated by the three-year civil war.
Anti-jihadist air strikes and heavy clashes in the besieged town of Ain al-Arab on the border with Turkey killed at least 18 people – nine militants and nine Kurdish fighters, monitors said.
Ambulances ferried wounded fighters for treatment in Turkey amid mortar fire, with some rounds falling very close to the border, an AFP correspondent on the Turkish side reported.
The twin blasts in Homs farther south hit a neighbourhood inhabited mainly by the Alawite community of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad which has been frequently targeted by rebels and jihadists.
One attacker carried out both of the bombings, planting a bomb at one location before blowing himself up at another spot, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
It said the dead children were among at least 39 people killed.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility.
About 191,000 people have been killed since an uprising against Assad erupted in 2011, escalating into a several-sided war involving pro-government forces, hardline jihadists and more moderate rebels.
Near the Turkish border, Kurdish forces have been on the defensive for more than two weeks in the face of a jihadist assault that sent tens of thousands of refugees streaming across the frontier.
With IS fighters less than three kilometres (two miles) from the town, the US-led coalition carried out three air strikes in the area on Tuesday and Wednesday, the Pentagon said.
The raids destroyed an IS armed vehicle, an artillery piece and a tank, US Central Command said, bringing to seven the number of raids around Kobane since Saturday.
‘Thrown into the air’
At least eight jihadist fighters were killed when a tank was hit, according to the Observatory, a Britain-based monitoring group.
“Kurdish fighters on the front lines saw the bodies literally being thrown into the air” by the force of the blast, Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said.
One refugee from the fighting told AFP that the light weapons available to the town’s defenders meant that they could only engage the jihadists at close quarters.