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Kobanî

Kobanî (كوباني, pronounced [koˈbaːniː], also rendered Kobanê [koˈbaːne], Arabic: كُوبَانِي, romanizedKūbānī), officially Ayn al-Arab (Arabic: عَيْن الْعَرَب, romanizedʿAyn al-ʿArab North Levantine pronunciation: [ʕeːn elˈʕɑrɑb]), is a Kurdish-majority city in northern Syria, lying immediately south of the Syria–Turkey border. As a consequence of the Syrian civil war, the city came under the control of the Kurdish-majority People's Protection Units (YPG) militia in 2012 and became the administrative center of the Kobani Canton,[3] later transformed into Euphrates Region of the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria.

Kobanî
City
Ayn al-Arab
عَيْن الْعَرَب
View of Kobanî during the siege of 2014
Kobanî
Location in Syria
Coordinates: 36°53′28″N 38°21′13″E / 36.8910278°N 38.3536111°E / 36.8910278; 38.3536111Coordinates: 36°53′28″N 38°21′13″E / 36.8910278°N 38.3536111°E / 36.8910278; 38.3536111
Country Syria
GovernorateAleppo
DistrictAyn al-Arab
SubdistrictAyn al-Arab
Founded1915
Area
 • City7 km2 (3 sq mi)
Elevation
520 m (1,710 ft)
Population
 (2004 census, unless stated otherwise)[1]
 • City44,821
 • Estimate 
(2015)[2]
40,000
 • Nahiyah
78,130
Time zoneUTC+2 (EET)
 • Summer (DST)+3
P-Code
C1946
GeocodeSY020600

From September 2014 to January 2015, the city was under siege by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant. Most of the eastern parts of the city were destroyed and most of the population fled to Turkey.[4] In 2015, many returned and reconstruction began.

In mid October 2019, Kurdish forces accepted the entry of the Syrian Army and Russian Military Police in a bid to stop Turkey from invading the town.[5]

Prior to the Syrian Civil War, Kobanî was recorded as having a population of close to 45,000.[1] According to 2013 estimates, the majority of the inhabitants were Kurds, with Arab, Turkmen, and Armenian minorities.[6]

Name

One theory of the origin of the name Kobanî (كوباني) is the word company, referring to the German railway company[7][8] who built the section of the Konya-Baghdad Railway that the city is placed along from 1911.[9][10][11][12] However, this is doubted by some who point out that company in German is “Gesellschaft”, whereas "Kompanie" (meaning company) refers solely to military units. Others have suggested that the origin of the middle of the word Kobanî could come from the German "Bahn", meaning road, as the railroad was in fact named "Anatolische Eisenbahn".[8]

The Ottoman name of the eastern village was Arab Punarı (Ottoman Turkish: عرب پیناری, Turkish: Arap Pınar, lit.'Spring of the Arabs'),[13] and Kobanî's Arabic name, ʿAyn al-ʿArab (عين العرب), is a translation of this. The word "spring" refers to the creek that used to flow east of the village, and during the summer Arab nomads would bring their herds to the location. This village was located south of a small lake that dried up in the 1960s. The name Mürşitpinar is still used as the name for the western village and the railway station in the Turkish side.[14]

Climate

Kobanî has a hot-summer Mediterranean climate (Köppen climate classification Csa).

Climate data for Kobanî
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 7.7
(45.9)
9.7
(49.5)
14.6
(58.3)
22.3
(72.1)
26.8
(80.2)
32.5
(90.5)
36.4
(97.5)
36.1
(97.0)
31.7
(89.1)
24.8
(76.6)
16.4
(61.5)
9.9
(49.8)
22.4
(72.3)
Average low °C (°F) −1.1
(30.0)
0.8
(33.4)
2.8
(37.0)
6.5
(43.7)
11.2
(52.2)
16.0
(60.8)
19.4
(66.9)
18.9
(66.0)
14.3
(57.7)
9.2
(48.6)
4.1
(39.4)
0.7
(33.3)
8.6
(47.4)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 78
(3.1)
58
(2.3)
52
(2.0)
39
(1.5)
25
(1.0)
3
(0.1)
0
(0)
0
(0)
2
(0.1)
23
(0.9)
37
(1.5)
72
(2.8)
389
(15.3)
Average rainy days 11 7 5 5 4 2 0 0 2 4 6 10 56
Average snowy days 2.5 1.5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 6
Average relative humidity (%) 75 67 60 56 42 40 34 34 44 47 55 75 52
Source: [15]

History

Ottoman Empire and before

Historical population
YearPop.±%
2005 54,681—    
201540,000−26.8%
2016 44,821+12.1%
Source:[16]

Prior to World War I, the area was mainly populated by Kurdish tribes, many but not all of which were part of the Milli confederation. These tribes had progressively migrated in from the north during the 19th century, pushing back the Arab tribes which had previously occupied the area.[17] Local Kurds living in the plains to the east of the modern town reportedly provided lodgings at their encampment for a French-led archaeological team on its way to survey the nearby ancient Assyrian site of Arslan Tashî (Kurdish: Shêran) in the summer of 1883.[18]

In 1892, there were three homesteads situated in the area.[19] During the construction of the Baghdad Railway (launched by the Ottoman Empire to connect Baghdad with Berlin), Kurdish raiders from the Busrawi and Shahin Bey clans—rivals who lived south and east of today's Kobanî - reportedly harassed work crews attempting to mine basalt from the nearby hills, partially owing to the fact that the German companies responsible for its construction were lax in providing payment and compensation to local landowners.[17] German engineers staying in the area from 1912 to 1913 described Arab Punar as a "small Kurdish village around 35 km (22 mi) east of the Euphrates" comprising a small cluster of square mud-brick huts, many with domed roofs; the local chief's hut was notable among these in its incorporation of European-style doors and windows and its concrete flooring. The area was apparently also known for its swarms of biting sand-flies.[20]

The newly built town began to form south of a simple train station built in 1912 along the railway by workers from the nearby town of Suruç.[12] The train station was part of the Baghdad Railway project launched by the Ottoman government to connect Baghdad with Berlin.[11] Refugees fleeing the Armenian genocide in the Ottoman Empire settled in the newly built town around 1915, and were soon joined by more Kurds from nearby areas.[11][12]

 
Maunsell's ethnographical map of northern Syria in 1910. Location of Ayn al-Arab (Arab punar) marked on top center of map

French Mandate

Some of the Kurds who settled in Kobanî were originally from the Kurdish regions in Turkey. Some fled persecution following the Kurdish-led Sheikh Said rebellion in 1925.[11] After the demarcation of the border with Turkey along the railway line in 1921, the northern part of Ayn al-Arab was left on the Turkish side. This small settlement is incorporated in the Suruç district and still has a little railway station and a border crossing gate. By the middle of the 20th century, there were three Armenian churches and two schools in the town, but many Armenians emigrated to the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic in the 1960s while others moved to bigger cities, including Aleppo and Beirut, as well as cities in the US and other countries.[21][22] The town was also home to a small Syriac Orthodox community, but their numbers dwindled and the town's only Syriac Orthodox church was demolished in the early 1960s.[23]

The city's infrastructural layout was largely planned and constructed by French authorities during the Mandatory period, and a number of French-built buildings were still standing and in use until recently.[6] During this period, the city of Suruç served as the regional center of Kobanî. The area was marked by several border crossings with Turkey, unsanctioned by either the Turkish or French Mandatory governments. The crossings became a source of numerous Turkish complaints and led to the establishment of a French intelligence office in Kobanî to monitor border activity.[11] Throughout the 20th century, the border remained officially closed even as the neighbouring towns of Tell Abyad and Jarablus—both of which had smaller Kurdish populations—were allowed to have commercial border crossings, a situation which economically marginalised Kobanî for many years.[24] However, there was limited traffic at the Kobanî-Mürşitpinar gate and passengers from Kobanî often crossed through it to travel by train to Aleppo. By 2011, as a result of the Syrian Civil War, traffic through this gate increased. Wounded and sick people could cross to the Turkish side while trucks carrying goods crossed into Kobanî from Mürşitpınar.[25]

Syria pre-autonomy

 
Prior to the Syrian Civil War, Kobanî was the administrative center of Nahiya Ayn al-Arab and Ayn al-Arab District.

When Syria gained independence from France in 1946, the intelligence building[which?] served as the political office of the Kobanî area's highest-ranking local administrator. Kobanî started to develop as a city in the 1950s when it was further separated from Suruç as a result of the Turkish government mining of the border area.

Syrian Civil War

Siege by ISIL

The People's Protection Units (YPG) took control of Kobanî on 19 July 2012.[26] The Syrian authorities in Kobanî and other Kurdish towns evacuated the government offices and centers without any fighting taking place between the Syrian and Kurdish forces. Since July 2012, Kobanî has been under Kurdish control. The YPG and Kurdish politicians anticipated autonomy for the area, which they consider part of Rojava.[27] After similar less intense events earlier in 2014, on 2 July the town and surrounding villages came under a massive attack from fighters of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.[28] On 16 September, ISIL resumed its siege of Kobanî with a full-scale assault from the west and the south of the city.

 
Kobanî during the bombardment of ISIL targets by US-led forces. Photo taken from Turkish-Syrian border at Suruç,Suruc, Turkey showing refugee camp in the middle distance (October 2014)

Kobanî Canton had been under attack by ISIL militants for several months. In September 2014, militants occupied most of the Kobanî region, seizing more than 100 Kurdish villages.[29][30] As a consequence of the ISIL occupation, up to 200,000 Kurdish refugees fled from Kobanî Canton to Turkey.[29] Turkish authorities did not allow the refugees to enter with any vehicles or livestock that they had.[31]

 
Paris Kurds rally in support of Kobanî on 1 November 2014

In captured villages, militants committed massacres and kidnapped women.[30] IS militants, however, were not able to occupy all of Kobanî itself, as the YPG and YPJ forces managed to defend a part of Kobanî and later several nearby settlements. After weeks of isolation, which resulted from Turkey's preventing arms and fighters from entering the town (which in turn was due to the general hostility of the Turkish establishment towards Kurds with any links to the PKK), the US-led coalition began to target ISIL with a larger number of airstrikes. From September 2014 through January 2015, hundreds of airstrikes struck ISIL fighters and leveled most of the administrative buildings and houses in the city center, helping to stop the ISIL advance. On 20 October there were reports that Turkey, under significant US pressure, would allow Kurdish fighters from Iraqi Kurdistan to cross into Kobanî.[32] About 150 Kurdish troops were admitted on 29 October, which then began to turn the tide of the siege in favor of the Kurds. The YPG forced ISIL to retreat from Kobanî on 26 January 2015,[4] thus lifting the siege.[33] The city is currently[when?] under YPG control.

Reaction

The humanitarian response to the people from Kobanî who were displaced to Suruc, Turkey, was highly polarized, with actors associated with the Turkish state on the one hand, and the pro-Kurdish movement on the other.[34] In September 2014, Defend International launched a worldwide campaign aimed at, among other things, raising awareness about Kobanî and the brutal attacks its residents were subjected to, and building connections between potential partners and communities whose work is relevant to the campaign, including individuals, groups, communities, and NGOs[35][36]

In October 2014, Widad Akrawi, President of Defend International, dedicated her 2014 International Pfeffer Peace Award to, among others, all residents of Kobane because, she said, facts on the ground demonstrate that these peaceful people are not safe in their enclaves, partly because of their ethnic origin and/or religion, and they are therefore in urgent need for immediate attention from the global community.[37][38][39][40][41][42][43] She asked the international community to make sure that the victims are not forgotten; they should be rescued, protected, fully assisted and compensated fairly.[44]

On 4 November 2014, Akrawi said that "a massacre can be avoided, if there is a well-organized and well-defined plan on how to deal with IS – a plan that sets out the strategic and tactical activities to be undertaken at the international, regional and local levels," adding that journalists, humanitarian- and human rights organizations are not allowed to pass through Turkish checkpoints near the border.[45]

June 2015 massacre

On 25 June 2015, fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant detonated three car bombs in Kobanî, close to the Turkish border crossing and launched a surprise assault on the town. At least 220 Kurdish civilians were massacred in mass killings by ISIL fighters[46][47] or were killed by the group's rockets. Many more were wounded by the attack, making it one of the worst massacres carried out by ISIL in Syria. In another report Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and spokesman for the Kurdish People's Protection Units said that more than 200 Kurdish civilians were massacred. Women and children were among the bodies found inside houses and on the streets of Kobanî and its surrounding villages. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that ISIL fired at anything that moved.[48][49][50][51][52][53] Islamic State also committed a massacre in the village of Barkh Butan, about 20 kilometers south of Kobanî, executing at least 23 Syrian Kurds, among them women and children.[54] Kurdish forces and the Syrian government claimed the vehicles had entered the city from across the border, an action denied by Turkey.[55]

Reconstruction and development

After the ISIL siege was broken in early 2015, the Kobane Reconstruction Board asked for international assistance.[56] According to a spokesman for the Syrian Kurds who control the town, Kobanî had been 70% destroyed.[57] There have been several attempts to support Kobanî, especially from the Kurdish communities in Turkey and Iraq. Assistance was also offered by several European organizations. As of May 2015, Turkey has kept the border closed but allowed some materials to reach the city. The international community, including the US, has not shown interest in rebuilding the town, nor have they pressured Turkey on the matter.[58] By May 2015 more than 50,000 people had returned to the destroyed town. In May the Kobanî authorities, with the help of the municipality of Diyarbakır, managed to restore the water pump and supply for the urban area after 8 months without running water, repairing the pipelines and cleaning the main water tank.[59] By May 2016, despite the challenges of the blockade by Turkey, reconstruction and return of inhabitants was well on the way.[60]

In September 2016, Kurdish Red Crescent opened a hospital in the city under the name of "Kobani Hospital", their first hospital in Kobanî Canton, after several international organizations like UNICEF and Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) had been sending them special medical equipment.[61] It was established in a hospital formerly owned by Dr. Ezzat Afandi, an Austrian citizen.[62]

In an October 2016 report from the city of Kobanî, U.S. academic Si Sheppard observed: "Since the siege of Kobanî ended, reconstruction has barely begun to compensate for the havoc wrought on the city by both ISIS artillery and coalition airstrikes (...). Herculean efforts have cleared the streets, but water and power have yet to be restored. Although commerce is trickling back to life (...), more than half of the residential structures still standing are little more than blown out concrete shells. Yet the spirit of the people endures: Some now use defused ISIS rounds as ashtrays and flower pots."[63]

By 2019, atrocities by ISIL have driven many families of Kobani to convert to Christianity, while others chose to become atheists and agnostics.[64]

Entry of Syrian and Russian forces

 
Russian military police in Kobanî on 23 October 2019

Following the start of the 2019 Turkish offensive into north-eastern Syria, which put the city's administration under existential threat, the Syrian Democratic Forces reached a deal with the Syrian Government in which the latter would deploy limited parts of the Syrian Army, backed by Russian Military Police, to the town to prevent it from coming under Turkish attack. Pro-government forces entered the town by mid October 2019 and Syrian State Media circulated images of Syrian troops raising the Syrian flag in the town. Following the acceptance of the Second Northern Syria Buffer Zone Agreement, Kurdish military forces were mandated to withdraw from the town. Nevertheless, the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria was reported to still be in de facto civil control of the town, while Syrian and Russian forces took up positions along the border areas and began military patrols along the city's streets.[5][65][66]

On 16 April 2021, a Turkish drone strike destroyed the house Abdullah Öcalan had stayed in the city during 1979. The house was used as a museum by the YPG and the strike only caused material damage.[67]

Media

The documentary "Radio Kobani" won the Award for Best Documentary at the International Documentary Festival – Amsterdam (IDFA) in November 2016.[68]

In 2015, the Italian author Zerocalcare published a comics-illustrated book called "Kobane Calling" where he reported his experience among the defenders of the Rojava region.

Notable sights

Sister cities

  Rome – In April 2015, the municipality of Rome, capital of   Italy, recognised the municipality of Kobanî as a sister city.[71][72][73][better source needed]

  Naples – In June 2015, the municipality of Naples, in   Italy, recognised the municipality of Kobanî as a sister city.[74]

Ancona – In June 2015, the municipality of Ancona,   Italy, recognised the municipality of Kobanî as a sister city.[75]

See also

References

  1. ^ a b (in Arabic). Syrian Central Bureau of Statistics. Archived from the original on 24 November 2015. Retrieved 15 October 2015. Also available in English: "Syria: 2004 census data". UN OCHA. Retrieved 15 October 2015.
  2. ^ . BestaNûçe. 17 March 2015. Archived from the original on 13 July 2018. Retrieved 12 October 2015.
  3. ^ Abboud 2018, Table 4.1 Cantons of the Rojava Administration.
  4. ^ a b "Syrian Kurds 'drive Islamic State out of Kobane'". BBC News. 26 January 2015. Retrieved 26 January 2015.
  5. ^ a b "Syrian government forces set to enter Kobani and Manbij after SDF deal". The Defense Post. 13 October 2019. Retrieved 28 October 2019.
  6. ^ a b according to a 2013 estimate, about 90% Kurds, close to 5% Arab and Turkmen, and 1% Armenians."The Second Report: Ayn al-Arab/Kobani, Etana Billetin-First issue". Etana Files. 1 December 2013. Retrieved 28 April 2014.
  7. ^ Sociéte Impériale du Chemin de fer de Bagdad, founded on 13 April 1903 with 40% ownership of Deutsche Bank, 30% Imperial Ottoman Bank, 10% Anatolische Eisenbahn-Gesellschaft, 7.5% Wiener Bankverein, 7.5% Schweizerische Kreditanstalt, 5% Banca Commerciale Italiana.
  8. ^ a b "Explained: Kobane or Ayn al-Arab?". Daily News. 28 August 2014. Retrieved 21 June 2015.
  9. ^ Other sources that refer to this subject include Nedal Yousef, 'Interview with Hussein Amin Hussein about [his book] 'Ayn al-Arab – One Hundred Years "حسين أمين حسين"...يتحدث عن مدينة "عين العرب" في مئة عام.. (esyria.sy) 9 April 2009. Hussein Ali Hussein, "Ayn Al-Arab over a century" (عين العرب في مئة عام), Dar Al-Aqsa, Damascus (2007); the book is a history of the town compiled for its centennial from accounts in living memory (notably from one Mohamed Abdi, who according to Hussein died in 1998 aged 118, as well as "other centenarians from the region").
  10. ^ Patrick Cockburn, Isis in Kobani: Turkey's act of abandonment may mark an 'irrevocable breach' with Kurds across the region Independent 7 October 2014.
  11. ^ a b c d e Tastekin, Fehim (28 October 2014). "Erdogan plays 'Arab card' in Kobani". Al-Monitor.
  12. ^ a b c Movsesian, Mark (27 October 2014). "Kobani, Then and Now". First Things.
  13. ^ "Explained: Kobane or Ayn al-Arab? - World News". Hürriyet Daily News.
  14. ^ The district of Kobanî comprises about 170 villages: Gérard Chaliand, A People Without a Country: The Kurds and Kurdistan, 1993, p. 195. name of the station: Office International de Renseignements sur les Sauterelles de Damas, 1930, p. 43.
  15. ^ Weather Online, Weather Base, BBC Weather and My Weather 2, accessed 10 November 2012
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  19. ^ Nedal Yousef, 'Interview with Hussein Amin Hussein about [his book] 'Ayn al-Arab – One Hundred Years "حسين أمين حسين"...يتحدث عن مدينة "عين العرب" في مئة عام.. (esyria.sy) 9 April 2009. Hussein Ali Hussein, "Ayn Al-Arab over a century" (عين العرب في مئة عام), Dar Al-Aqsa, Damascus (2007); the book is a history of the town compiled for its centennial from accounts in living memory (notably from one Mohamed Abdi, who according to Hussein died in 1998 aged 118, as well as "other centenarians from the region").
  20. ^ Boyes, William (March 1916). "Persönliche Erinnerungen vom Bau der Bagdadbahn". The Technologist: Mitteilungen des deutsch-amerikanischen Techniker-Verbandes (in German). 21 (3): 80–86.
  21. ^ Cheterian, Vikin (2 October 2013). "Kurdish Leader Denies Syrian Kurds Seek Secession". Translated by Sami-Joe Abboud. Al Monitor. Retrieved 28 April 2014. Originally published in Arabic by Al-Hayat as أكراد سورية لا يريدون الانفصال نحارب النظام و"النصرة" ونخشى مجازر on 28 September 2013.
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  26. ^ "More Kurdish Cities Liberated As Syrian Army Withdraws from Area". Rudaw. 20 July 2012.
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  29. ^ a b "Isis onslaught against Kurds in Syria brings 'man-made disaster' into Turkey". The Guardian. 22 September 2014. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  30. ^ a b IPD Group. . Archived from the original on 13 July 2018. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
  31. ^ Ayla Albayrak (17 October 2014). "Hundreds Wait for Kobani Fighting to End, Risking Lives at Border". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved 29 October 2014.
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  33. ^ . 26 January 2015. Archived from the original on 16 October 2015.
  34. ^ McGee, Thomas (2016). "Mapping action and identity in the Kobani crisis response". Kurdish Studies. 4 (1): 51–77. doi:10.33182/ks.v4i1.406. Retrieved 11 November 2016.
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  46. ^ "Syrian Kurds say thwart big Islamic State attack on border town". Reuters, Yahoo News.
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  52. ^ "Isis in Kobani: Why we ignore the worst of the massacres". The Independent. 27 June 2015.
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  58. ^ Geerdink, Fréderike (9 May 2015). "Closed Turkish border endangers present and future of Kobani". Beacon. Retrieved 12 May 2015.
  59. ^ Clifford, Peter (15 May 2015). "Kobane / Cizire Update 90: Kurdish Advance in Cizire Continues Taking 20+ Villages from Islamic State in 48 Hours". Retrieved 12 May 2015.
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  61. ^ . Hawar News Agency. 24 September 2016. Archived from the original on 3 March 2018. Retrieved 24 September 2016.
  62. ^ "Das "Wiener Spital" in Kobane". Kurier. 31 December 2014. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
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  65. ^ Genesove, Ziv. "On Syria's border, a snapshot of Kurdish town's 2018 calm ahead of current storm". www.timesofisrael.com. Retrieved 28 October 2019.
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  67. ^ "بعد أكثر من 40 سنة.. طائرة تركية تستهدف منزل مكث فيه عبدالله أوجلان أول قائد لحزب العمال الكردستاني في منطقة عين العرب (كوباني)". SOHR. 16 April 2021. Retrieved 16 April 2021.
  68. ^ "Kobani film wins best Dutch documentary award". ARA News. 25 November 2016.
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  70. ^ "New Kobane clock tower symbol of Kurdish resistance against ISIS". www.rudaw.net. Retrieved 11 July 2020.
  71. ^ "Rome Declares Kobane 'Sister City'". Kurdishquestion. 5 April 2015. Archived from the original on 13 December 2016. Retrieved 19 August 2016.
  72. ^ QuotidianoNet (23 April 2015). "Roma si gemella con Kobane: "Simbolo di resistenza" - QuotidianoNet". QuotidianoNet (in Italian). Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  73. ^ "Roma abbraccia Kobane - Core". Core (in Italian). 24 April 2015. Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  74. ^ "Napoli in gemellaggio con Kobane: "Vicini a chi lotta per la pace e la libertà"". NapoliToday (in Italian). Retrieved 15 February 2017.
  75. ^ "Gemellaggio con Kobane, città simbolo della resistenza contro l'Isis: Sel deposita mozione". AnconaToday (in Italian). Retrieved 15 February 2017.

Works cited

Further reading

  • Gayle Tzemach Lemmon (2021). The Daughters of Kobani: A Story of Rebellion, Courage, and Justice. Penguin Press. ISBN 978-0525560685.

External links

  • Documentary "Radio Kobani" on IMDb
  • Recommendations for reconstructing Kobani on www.kobani.net

kobanî, كوباني, pronounced, koˈbaːniː, also, rendered, kobanê, koˈbaːne, arabic, وب, ان, romanized, kūbānī, officially, arab, arabic, ال, romanized, ʿayn, ʿarab, north, levantine, pronunciation, ʕeːn, elˈʕɑrɑb, kurdish, majority, city, northern, syria, lying, . Kobani كوباني pronounced koˈbaːniː also rendered Kobane koˈbaːne Arabic ك وب ان ي romanized Kubani officially Ayn al Arab Arabic ع ي ن ال ع ر ب romanized ʿAyn al ʿArab North Levantine pronunciation ʕeːn elˈʕɑrɑb is a Kurdish majority city in northern Syria lying immediately south of the Syria Turkey border As a consequence of the Syrian civil war the city came under the control of the Kurdish majority People s Protection Units YPG militia in 2012 and became the administrative center of the Kobani Canton 3 later transformed into Euphrates Region of the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria KobaniCityAyn al Arab ع ي ن ال ع ر بView of Kobani during the siege of 2014KobaniLocation in SyriaCoordinates 36 53 28 N 38 21 13 E 36 8910278 N 38 3536111 E 36 8910278 38 3536111 Coordinates 36 53 28 N 38 21 13 E 36 8910278 N 38 3536111 E 36 8910278 38 3536111Country SyriaGovernorateAleppoDistrictAyn al ArabSubdistrictAyn al ArabFounded1915Area City7 km2 3 sq mi Elevation520 m 1 710 ft Population 2004 census unless stated otherwise 1 City44 821 Estimate 2015 2 40 000 Nahiyah78 130Time zoneUTC 2 EET Summer DST 3P CodeC1946GeocodeSY020600From September 2014 to January 2015 the city was under siege by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant Most of the eastern parts of the city were destroyed and most of the population fled to Turkey 4 In 2015 many returned and reconstruction began In mid October 2019 Kurdish forces accepted the entry of the Syrian Army and Russian Military Police in a bid to stop Turkey from invading the town 5 Prior to the Syrian Civil War Kobani was recorded as having a population of close to 45 000 1 According to 2013 estimates the majority of the inhabitants were Kurds with Arab Turkmen and Armenian minorities 6 Contents 1 Name 2 Climate 3 History 3 1 Ottoman Empire and before 3 2 French Mandate 3 3 Syria pre autonomy 3 4 Syrian Civil War 3 4 1 Siege by ISIL 3 4 2 Reaction 3 4 3 June 2015 massacre 3 5 Reconstruction and development 3 6 Entry of Syrian and Russian forces 4 Media 5 Notable sights 6 Sister cities 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Works cited 9 Further reading 10 External linksName EditOne theory of the origin of the name Kobani كوباني is the word company referring to the German railway company 7 8 who built the section of the Konya Baghdad Railway that the city is placed along from 1911 9 10 11 12 However this is doubted by some who point out that company in German is Gesellschaft whereas Kompanie meaning company refers solely to military units Others have suggested that the origin of the middle of the word Kobani could come from the German Bahn meaning road as the railroad was in fact named Anatolische Eisenbahn 8 The Ottoman name of the eastern village was Arab Punari Ottoman Turkish عرب پیناری Turkish Arap Pinar lit Spring of the Arabs 13 and Kobani s Arabic name ʿAyn al ʿArab عين العرب is a translation of this The word spring refers to the creek that used to flow east of the village and during the summer Arab nomads would bring their herds to the location This village was located south of a small lake that dried up in the 1960s The name Mursitpinar is still used as the name for the western village and the railway station in the Turkish side 14 Climate EditKobani has a hot summer Mediterranean climate Koppen climate classification Csa Climate data for KobaniMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 7 7 45 9 9 7 49 5 14 6 58 3 22 3 72 1 26 8 80 2 32 5 90 5 36 4 97 5 36 1 97 0 31 7 89 1 24 8 76 6 16 4 61 5 9 9 49 8 22 4 72 3 Average low C F 1 1 30 0 0 8 33 4 2 8 37 0 6 5 43 7 11 2 52 2 16 0 60 8 19 4 66 9 18 9 66 0 14 3 57 7 9 2 48 6 4 1 39 4 0 7 33 3 8 6 47 4 Average precipitation mm inches 78 3 1 58 2 3 52 2 0 39 1 5 25 1 0 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 2 0 1 23 0 9 37 1 5 72 2 8 389 15 3 Average rainy days 11 7 5 5 4 2 0 0 2 4 6 10 56Average snowy days 2 5 1 5 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 2 6Average relative humidity 75 67 60 56 42 40 34 34 44 47 55 75 52Source 15 History EditOttoman Empire and before Edit Historical populationYearPop 200554 681 201540 000 26 8 201644 821 12 1 Source 16 Prior to World War I the area was mainly populated by Kurdish tribes many but not all of which were part of the Milli confederation These tribes had progressively migrated in from the north during the 19th century pushing back the Arab tribes which had previously occupied the area 17 Local Kurds living in the plains to the east of the modern town reportedly provided lodgings at their encampment for a French led archaeological team on its way to survey the nearby ancient Assyrian site of Arslan Tashi Kurdish Sheran in the summer of 1883 18 In 1892 there were three homesteads situated in the area 19 During the construction of the Baghdad Railway launched by the Ottoman Empire to connect Baghdad with Berlin Kurdish raiders from the Busrawi and Shahin Bey clans rivals who lived south and east of today s Kobani reportedly harassed work crews attempting to mine basalt from the nearby hills partially owing to the fact that the German companies responsible for its construction were lax in providing payment and compensation to local landowners 17 German engineers staying in the area from 1912 to 1913 described Arab Punar as a small Kurdish village around 35 km 22 mi east of the Euphrates comprising a small cluster of square mud brick huts many with domed roofs the local chief s hut was notable among these in its incorporation of European style doors and windows and its concrete flooring The area was apparently also known for its swarms of biting sand flies 20 The newly built town began to form south of a simple train station built in 1912 along the railway by workers from the nearby town of Suruc 12 The train station was part of the Baghdad Railway project launched by the Ottoman government to connect Baghdad with Berlin 11 Refugees fleeing the Armenian genocide in the Ottoman Empire settled in the newly built town around 1915 and were soon joined by more Kurds from nearby areas 11 12 Maunsell s ethnographical map of northern Syria in 1910 Location of Ayn al Arab Arab punar marked on top center of map French Mandate Edit Some of the Kurds who settled in Kobani were originally from the Kurdish regions in Turkey Some fled persecution following the Kurdish led Sheikh Said rebellion in 1925 11 After the demarcation of the border with Turkey along the railway line in 1921 the northern part of Ayn al Arab was left on the Turkish side This small settlement is incorporated in the Suruc district and still has a little railway station and a border crossing gate By the middle of the 20th century there were three Armenian churches and two schools in the town but many Armenians emigrated to the Armenian Soviet Socialist Republic in the 1960s while others moved to bigger cities including Aleppo and Beirut as well as cities in the US and other countries 21 22 The town was also home to a small Syriac Orthodox community but their numbers dwindled and the town s only Syriac Orthodox church was demolished in the early 1960s 23 The city s infrastructural layout was largely planned and constructed by French authorities during the Mandatory period and a number of French built buildings were still standing and in use until recently 6 During this period the city of Suruc served as the regional center of Kobani The area was marked by several border crossings with Turkey unsanctioned by either the Turkish or French Mandatory governments The crossings became a source of numerous Turkish complaints and led to the establishment of a French intelligence office in Kobani to monitor border activity 11 Throughout the 20th century the border remained officially closed even as the neighbouring towns of Tell Abyad and Jarablus both of which had smaller Kurdish populations were allowed to have commercial border crossings a situation which economically marginalised Kobani for many years 24 However there was limited traffic at the Kobani Mursitpinar gate and passengers from Kobani often crossed through it to travel by train to Aleppo By 2011 as a result of the Syrian Civil War traffic through this gate increased Wounded and sick people could cross to the Turkish side while trucks carrying goods crossed into Kobani from Mursitpinar 25 Syria pre autonomy Edit Prior to the Syrian Civil War Kobani was the administrative center of Nahiya Ayn al Arab and Ayn al Arab District When Syria gained independence from France in 1946 the intelligence building which served as the political office of the Kobani area s highest ranking local administrator Kobani started to develop as a city in the 1950s when it was further separated from Suruc as a result of the Turkish government mining of the border area Syrian Civil War Edit Siege by ISIL Edit Main articles Rojava Islamist conflict and Siege of Kobani The People s Protection Units YPG took control of Kobani on 19 July 2012 26 The Syrian authorities in Kobani and other Kurdish towns evacuated the government offices and centers without any fighting taking place between the Syrian and Kurdish forces Since July 2012 Kobani has been under Kurdish control The YPG and Kurdish politicians anticipated autonomy for the area which they consider part of Rojava 27 After similar less intense events earlier in 2014 on 2 July the town and surrounding villages came under a massive attack from fighters of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant 28 On 16 September ISIL resumed its siege of Kobani with a full scale assault from the west and the south of the city Kobani during the bombardment of ISIL targets by US led forces Photo taken from Turkish Syrian border at Suruc Suruc Turkey showing refugee camp in the middle distance October 2014 Kobani Canton had been under attack by ISIL militants for several months In September 2014 militants occupied most of the Kobani region seizing more than 100 Kurdish villages 29 30 As a consequence of the ISIL occupation up to 200 000 Kurdish refugees fled from Kobani Canton to Turkey 29 Turkish authorities did not allow the refugees to enter with any vehicles or livestock that they had 31 Paris Kurds rally in support of Kobani on 1 November 2014 In captured villages militants committed massacres and kidnapped women 30 IS militants however were not able to occupy all of Kobani itself as the YPG and YPJ forces managed to defend a part of Kobani and later several nearby settlements After weeks of isolation which resulted from Turkey s preventing arms and fighters from entering the town which in turn was due to the general hostility of the Turkish establishment towards Kurds with any links to the PKK the US led coalition began to target ISIL with a larger number of airstrikes From September 2014 through January 2015 hundreds of airstrikes struck ISIL fighters and leveled most of the administrative buildings and houses in the city center helping to stop the ISIL advance On 20 October there were reports that Turkey under significant US pressure would allow Kurdish fighters from Iraqi Kurdistan to cross into Kobani 32 About 150 Kurdish troops were admitted on 29 October which then began to turn the tide of the siege in favor of the Kurds The YPG forced ISIL to retreat from Kobani on 26 January 2015 4 thus lifting the siege 33 The city is currently when under YPG control Reaction Edit The humanitarian response to the people from Kobani who were displaced to Suruc Turkey was highly polarized with actors associated with the Turkish state on the one hand and the pro Kurdish movement on the other 34 In September 2014 Defend International launched a worldwide campaign aimed at among other things raising awareness about Kobani and the brutal attacks its residents were subjected to and building connections between potential partners and communities whose work is relevant to the campaign including individuals groups communities and NGOs 35 36 In October 2014 Widad Akrawi President of Defend International dedicated her 2014 International Pfeffer Peace Award to among others all residents of Kobane because she said facts on the ground demonstrate that these peaceful people are not safe in their enclaves partly because of their ethnic origin and or religion and they are therefore in urgent need for immediate attention from the global community 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 She asked the international community to make sure that the victims are not forgotten they should be rescued protected fully assisted and compensated fairly 44 On 4 November 2014 Akrawi said that a massacre can be avoided if there is a well organized and well defined plan on how to deal with IS a plan that sets out the strategic and tactical activities to be undertaken at the international regional and local levels adding that journalists humanitarian and human rights organizations are not allowed to pass through Turkish checkpoints near the border 45 June 2015 massacre Edit Main article Kobani massacre Martyrs Cemetery Kobani On 25 June 2015 fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant detonated three car bombs in Kobani close to the Turkish border crossing and launched a surprise assault on the town At least 220 Kurdish civilians were massacred in mass killings by ISIL fighters 46 47 or were killed by the group s rockets Many more were wounded by the attack making it one of the worst massacres carried out by ISIL in Syria In another report Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and spokesman for the Kurdish People s Protection Units said that more than 200 Kurdish civilians were massacred Women and children were among the bodies found inside houses and on the streets of Kobani and its surrounding villages The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that ISIL fired at anything that moved 48 49 50 51 52 53 Islamic State also committed a massacre in the village of Barkh Butan about 20 kilometers south of Kobani executing at least 23 Syrian Kurds among them women and children 54 Kurdish forces and the Syrian government claimed the vehicles had entered the city from across the border an action denied by Turkey 55 Reconstruction and development Edit After the ISIL siege was broken in early 2015 the Kobane Reconstruction Board asked for international assistance 56 According to a spokesman for the Syrian Kurds who control the town Kobani had been 70 destroyed 57 There have been several attempts to support Kobani especially from the Kurdish communities in Turkey and Iraq Assistance was also offered by several European organizations As of May 2015 Turkey has kept the border closed but allowed some materials to reach the city The international community including the US has not shown interest in rebuilding the town nor have they pressured Turkey on the matter 58 By May 2015 more than 50 000 people had returned to the destroyed town In May the Kobani authorities with the help of the municipality of Diyarbakir managed to restore the water pump and supply for the urban area after 8 months without running water repairing the pipelines and cleaning the main water tank 59 By May 2016 despite the challenges of the blockade by Turkey reconstruction and return of inhabitants was well on the way 60 In September 2016 Kurdish Red Crescent opened a hospital in the city under the name of Kobani Hospital their first hospital in Kobani Canton after several international organizations like UNICEF and Medecins Sans Frontieres MSF had been sending them special medical equipment 61 It was established in a hospital formerly owned by Dr Ezzat Afandi an Austrian citizen 62 In an October 2016 report from the city of Kobani U S academic Si Sheppard observed Since the siege of Kobani ended reconstruction has barely begun to compensate for the havoc wrought on the city by both ISIS artillery and coalition airstrikes Herculean efforts have cleared the streets but water and power have yet to be restored Although commerce is trickling back to life more than half of the residential structures still standing are little more than blown out concrete shells Yet the spirit of the people endures Some now use defused ISIS rounds as ashtrays and flower pots 63 By 2019 atrocities by ISIL have driven many families of Kobani to convert to Christianity while others chose to become atheists and agnostics 64 Entry of Syrian and Russian forces Edit Russian military police in Kobani on 23 October 2019 Following the start of the 2019 Turkish offensive into north eastern Syria which put the city s administration under existential threat the Syrian Democratic Forces reached a deal with the Syrian Government in which the latter would deploy limited parts of the Syrian Army backed by Russian Military Police to the town to prevent it from coming under Turkish attack Pro government forces entered the town by mid October 2019 and Syrian State Media circulated images of Syrian troops raising the Syrian flag in the town Following the acceptance of the Second Northern Syria Buffer Zone Agreement Kurdish military forces were mandated to withdraw from the town Nevertheless the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria was reported to still be in de facto civil control of the town while Syrian and Russian forces took up positions along the border areas and began military patrols along the city s streets 5 65 66 On 16 April 2021 a Turkish drone strike destroyed the house Abdullah Ocalan had stayed in the city during 1979 The house was used as a museum by the YPG and the strike only caused material damage 67 Media EditThe documentary Radio Kobani won the Award for Best Documentary at the International Documentary Festival Amsterdam IDFA in November 2016 68 In 2015 the Italian author Zerocalcare published a comics illustrated book called Kobane Calling where he reported his experience among the defenders of the Rojava region Notable sights EditArin Mirkan Statue 69 Clock Tower 70 Sister cities Edit Rome In April 2015 the municipality of Rome capital of Italy recognised the municipality of Kobani as a sister city 71 72 73 better source needed Naples In June 2015 the municipality of Naples in Italy recognised the municipality of Kobani as a sister city 74 Ancona In June 2015 the municipality of Ancona Italy recognised the municipality of Kobani as a sister city 75 See also EditAyn al Arab Subdistrict Ayn al Arab DistrictReferences Edit a b General Census of Population and Housing 2004 Ain al Arab nahiyah in Arabic Syrian Central Bureau of Statistics Archived from the original on 24 November 2015 Retrieved 15 October 2015 Also available in English Syria 2004 census data UN OCHA Retrieved 15 October 2015 40 thousand have returned to Kobane so far BestaNuce 17 March 2015 Archived from the original on 13 July 2018 Retrieved 12 October 2015 Abboud 2018 Table 4 1 Cantons of the Rojava Administration a b Syrian Kurds drive Islamic State out of Kobane BBC News 26 January 2015 Retrieved 26 January 2015 a b Syrian government forces set to enter Kobani and Manbij after SDF deal The Defense Post 13 October 2019 Retrieved 28 October 2019 a b according to a 2013 estimate about 90 Kurds close to 5 Arab and Turkmen and 1 Armenians The Second Report Ayn al Arab Kobani Etana Billetin First issue Etana Files 1 December 2013 Retrieved 28 April 2014 Societe Imperiale du Chemin de fer de Bagdad founded on 13 April 1903 with 40 ownership of Deutsche Bank 30 Imperial Ottoman Bank 10 Anatolische Eisenbahn Gesellschaft 7 5 Wiener Bankverein 7 5 Schweizerische Kreditanstalt 5 Banca Commerciale Italiana a b Explained Kobane or Ayn al Arab Daily News 28 August 2014 Retrieved 21 June 2015 Other sources that refer to this subject include Nedal Yousef Interview with Hussein Amin Hussein about his book Ayn al Arab One Hundred Years حسين أمين حسين يتحدث عن مدينة عين العرب في مئة عام esyria sy 9 April 2009 Hussein Ali Hussein Ayn Al Arab over a century عين العرب في مئة عام Dar Al Aqsa Damascus 2007 the book is a history of the town compiled for its centennial from accounts in living memory notably from one Mohamed Abdi who according to Hussein died in 1998 aged 118 as well as other centenarians from the region Patrick Cockburn Isis in Kobani Turkey s act of abandonment may mark an irrevocable breach with Kurds across the region Independent 7 October 2014 a b c d e Tastekin Fehim 28 October 2014 Erdogan plays Arab card in Kobani Al Monitor a b c Movsesian Mark 27 October 2014 Kobani Then and Now First Things Explained Kobane or Ayn al Arab World News Hurriyet Daily News The district of Kobani comprises about 170 villages Gerard Chaliand A People Without a Country The Kurds and Kurdistan 1993 p 195 name of the station Office International de Renseignements sur les Sauterelles de Damas 1930 p 43 Weather Online Weather Base BBC Weather and My Weather 2 accessed 10 November 2012 Ivan Watson Shiyar Sayed Mohamad 29 July 2012 200 000 civilians try to escape violence in Syrian city of Aleppo CNN a b Woolley Sir Leonard 1920 Dead towns and living men Being pages from an antiquary s notebook Oxford University Press pp 178 221 Heuzey Leon Hamdy Bey 1899 Les ruines de Arslan Tash Comptes rendus des seances de l Academie des Inscriptions et Belles Lettres in French 43 5 617 Nedal Yousef Interview with Hussein Amin Hussein about his book Ayn al Arab One Hundred Years حسين أمين حسين يتحدث عن مدينة عين العرب في مئة عام esyria sy 9 April 2009 Hussein Ali Hussein Ayn Al Arab over a century عين العرب في مئة عام Dar Al Aqsa Damascus 2007 the book is a history of the town compiled for its centennial from accounts in living memory notably from one Mohamed Abdi who according to Hussein died in 1998 aged 118 as well as other centenarians from the region Boyes William March 1916 Personliche Erinnerungen vom Bau der Bagdadbahn The Technologist Mitteilungen des deutsch amerikanischen Techniker Verbandes in German 21 3 80 86 Cheterian Vikin 2 October 2013 Kurdish Leader Denies Syrian Kurds Seek Secession Translated by Sami Joe Abboud Al Monitor Retrieved 28 April 2014 Originally published in Arabic by Al Hayat as أكراد سورية لا يريدون الانفصال نحارب النظام و النصرة ونخشى مجازر on 28 September 2013 Korucu Serdar 24 October 2014 Bir Ermeni cocugun Kobani hatiralari in Turkish Radikal السريان عين العرب وتل أبيض in Arabic qenshrin com 18 October 2005 Retrieved 11 December 2014 Yildiz Kerim 2005 The Kurds in Syria The Forgotten People London Pluto Press pp 25 ISBN 0745324991 Sinir Kapilari Listesi HUDUT KAPILARI NEVILERIN GORE ACIKLAMALI SINIR ULKELERI PDF in Turkish Turkish Interior Ministry 26 March 2013 p 3 Archived from the original PDF on 20 September 2013 Retrieved 3 November 2014 More Kurdish Cities Liberated As Syrian Army Withdraws from Area Rudaw 20 July 2012 NATO s Secret Kurdish War Turkey Prepares Iraq Style Attacks Inside Syria OpEd Eurasia Review 3 August 2012 Retrieved 29 October 2014 What s happening in Kobane Kurdish Question 6 July 2014 Archived from the original on 7 January 2015 a b Isis onslaught against Kurds in Syria brings man made disaster into Turkey The Guardian 22 September 2014 Retrieved 29 October 2014 a b IPD Group ISIL seizes 21 Kurdish villages in northern Syria close in on Kobani World News Report Archived from the original on 13 July 2018 Retrieved 29 October 2014 Ayla Albayrak 17 October 2014 Hundreds Wait for Kobani Fighting to End Risking Lives at Border The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 29 October 2014 Turkey to Allow Reinforcements The Independent 21 October 2014 Retrieved 29 October 2014 YPG retakes the entire city of Ayn al Arab Kobani after 112 days of clashes with IS militants The Syrian Observatory For Human Rights 26 January 2015 Archived from the original on 16 October 2015 McGee Thomas 2016 Mapping action and identity in the Kobani crisis response Kurdish Studies 4 1 51 77 doi 10 33182 ks v4i1 406 Retrieved 11 November 2016 Save The Yazidis The World Has To Act Now Retrieved 12 September 2014 Artist Jane Adams invited to join DI campaign 4 June 2012 Retrieved 29 September 2015 Dr Widad Akrawi awarded International Pfeffer Peace Prize Retrieved 20 October 2014 Dr Widad Akrawi Receives the Pfeffer Peace Award Archived from the original on 19 October 2015 Retrieved 30 September 2015 Dr Akrawi Dedicated Peace Award to Yezidis Christians and Kobane Retrieved 24 September 2015 Dr Widad Akrawi Baris odulunu Kobane ve Sengal e adadi Archived from the original on 11 November 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2014 Peace award dedicated to Kobani and Sengal Archived from the original on 20 October 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2014 Dr Widad Akrawi Xelata Astiye peskesi Kobane u Sengale hat kirin Archived from the original on 20 October 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2014 Xelata Astiye diyari Kobane hat kirin Archived from the original on 20 October 2014 Retrieved 20 October 2014 Save The Yazidis The World Has To Act Now Retrieved 29 September 2015 Dr Widad Akrawi Interviewed at RojNews Do you see a new Kurdish massacre looming in Kobane Retrieved 9 October 2015 Syrian Kurds say thwart big Islamic State attack on border town Reuters Yahoo News HRW ISIS murdered 233 civilians in Kobane since June Dicle News Agency Syria crisis Islamic State kills 120 civilians in Kobane BBC News 26 June 2015 Islamic State kills at least 145 civilians in Syria s Kobani Reuters 26 June 2015 ISIS kills at least 146 civilians in Kobane activists say Yahoo News Hubbard Ben 27 June 2015 Mass Killings by ISIL Fighters in Syrian Kurdish Town The New York Times Isis in Kobani Why we ignore the worst of the massacres The Independent 27 June 2015 Syria Islamic State Kurds claim control over Kobane BBC News 27 June 2015 IS executes 23 Kurds in village near Syria s Kobane Yahoo News Syria crisis IS re enters Kurdish held city of Kobane BBC News 25 June 2015 Retrieved 25 June 2015 News Help Kobane full citation needed Paton Walsh Nick 5 May 2015 Syrian town tries to rise from ashes after ISIS defeat CNN Geerdink Frederike 9 May 2015 Closed Turkish border endangers present and future of Kobani Beacon Retrieved 12 May 2015 Clifford Peter 15 May 2015 Kobane Cizire Update 90 Kurdish Advance in Cizire Continues Taking 20 Villages from Islamic State in 48 Hours Retrieved 12 May 2015 Syria civil war New beginnings in Kobane Al Jazeera 13 May 2016 Retrieved 13 May 2016 KRC opens the first hospital in Kobani Hawar News Agency 24 September 2016 Archived from the original on 3 March 2018 Retrieved 24 September 2016 Das Wiener Spital in Kobane Kurier 31 December 2014 Retrieved 31 December 2014 Si Sheppard 25 October 2016 What the Syrian Kurds Have Wrought The radical unlikely democratic experiment in northern Syria The Atlantic Retrieved 25 October 2016 Davidson John 16 April 2019 Christianity grows in Syrian town once besieged by Islamic State Reuters Kobani Archived from the original on 21 April 2019 Retrieved 16 October 2019 Genesove Ziv On Syria s border a snapshot of Kurdish town s 2018 calm ahead of current storm www timesofisrael com Retrieved 28 October 2019 Russian military police deploy in Syria s Kobani as part of deal with Turkey France 24 23 October 2019 Retrieved 28 October 2019 بعد أكثر من 40 سنة طائرة تركية تستهدف منزل مكث فيه عبدالله أوجلان أول قائد لحزب العمال الكردستاني في منطقة عين العرب كوباني SOHR 16 April 2021 Retrieved 16 April 2021 Kobani film wins best Dutch documentary award ARA News 25 November 2016 Kobane Petra Ramsauer Kobane wartet auf einen Angriff der Turkei NZZ am Sonntag in German Retrieved 11 July 2020 New Kobane clock tower symbol of Kurdish resistance against ISIS www rudaw net Retrieved 11 July 2020 Rome Declares Kobane Sister City Kurdishquestion 5 April 2015 Archived from the original on 13 December 2016 Retrieved 19 August 2016 QuotidianoNet 23 April 2015 Roma si gemella con Kobane Simbolo di resistenza QuotidianoNet QuotidianoNet in Italian Retrieved 15 February 2017 Roma abbraccia Kobane Core Core in Italian 24 April 2015 Retrieved 15 February 2017 Napoli in gemellaggio con Kobane Vicini a chi lotta per la pace e la liberta NapoliToday in Italian Retrieved 15 February 2017 Gemellaggio con Kobane citta simbolo della resistenza contro l Isis Sel deposita mozione AnconaToday in Italian Retrieved 15 February 2017 Works cited Edit Abboud Samer N 2018 Syria Hot Spots in Global Politics Cambridge Polity ISBN 978 1 509 52241 5 Further reading EditGayle Tzemach Lemmon 2021 The Daughters of Kobani A Story of Rebellion Courage and Justice Penguin Press ISBN 978 0525560685 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Kobani Documentary Radio Kobani on IMDb Recommendations for reconstructing Kobani on www kobani net Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Kobani amp oldid 1134268025, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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