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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/10/2014 1:05:03 PM

Strikes didn't end threat from al-Qaida cell

Associated Press

FILE - In this Sept. 23, 2014 file photo, provided by an anti-Bashar Assad activist group Edlib News Network (ENN), which has been authenticated based on its contents and other AP reporting, shows Syrian citizens checking a damaged house that they say was targeted by the coalition airstrikes, in the village of Kfar Derian, a base for the al-Qaida-linked Nusra Front, a rival of the Islamic State group, between the northern province of Aleppo and Idlib, Syria. The barrage of U.S. cruise missiles last month aimed at a terror cell in Syria killed just one or two of the key militants, according to American intelligence officials who say the al-Qaida group is still believed to be plotting attacks against targets in the United States and Europe. (AP Photo/Edlib News Network ENN, File)


WASHINGTON (AP) — The barrage of U.S. cruise missiles last month aimed at an al-Qaida cell in northern Syria cell killed just one or two key militants, according to American intelligence officials who say the group of veteran fighters is still believed to be plotting attacks against U.S. and European targets.

The strikes on a compound near Aleppo did not deal a crippling blow to the Khorasan Group, officials said, partly because many important members had scattered amid news reports highlighting their activities. Among those who survived is a French-born jihadi who fought in Afghanistan with a military prowess that is of great concern to U.S. intelligence officials now.

"The strikes were certainly effective in setting back the Khorasan Group, but no one thinks they were a permanent solution or a death blow to the threats that come from this cell," said Rep. Adam Schiff, a Democrat and a member of the House Intelligence Committee.

On Sept. 22, the U.S. fired 46 cruise missiles at eight locations to target the group. At the same time, American airstrikes struck targets associated with the Islamic State group in Syria.

One of the U.S. missiles went awry and killed a dozen civilians in the village of Kfar Derian, according to Mohammed Abu Omar, an activist in the northern province of Idlib. The U.S. military says it has not confirmed any civilian casualties.

The limited effectiveness of the attack on the Khorasan Group is partly the result of a hazy intelligence picture that also has bedeviled the air campaign against Islamic State targets in Syria and Iraq.

The U.S. lacks the networks of bases, spies and ground-based technology it had in place during the height of the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, officials say, or even the network of human sources it developed in Pakistan and Yemen.

The existence of the Khorasan Group became public only weeks before the airstrikes, but U.S. officials had been tracking it for up to two years. Officials said the group has a few dozen al-Qaida members, some of whom are long-sought militants of the fighting in Afghanistan and Pakistan. They are working closely with Syria's al-Qaida-linked Nusra Front, officials said.

The several current and former U.S. officials spoke on condition of anonymity about the group because they were not authorized to discuss classified information.

Khorasan is a historical reference to a region that included parts of Iran and Afghanistan.

In public, U.S. officials have offered seemingly contradictory assessments of the attacks on the Khorasan Group.

Gen. Martin Dempsey, chairman of the Joint Chiefs of Staff, said the strikes disrupted the group's plotting, but he did not know for how long. FBI Director James Comey said he believed the plots had not been disrupted and that the group remains a threat to the U.S. Other intelligence officials embraced Comey's view.

Unlike the Nusra Front, which is trying to topple Syrian President Bashar Assad, the Khorasan Group is focused chiefly on carrying out an attack against the West, officials say. The group is said to have been trying to recruit Europeans and Americans whose passports allow them to board a U.S.-bound airliner with less scrutiny.

In addition, according to classified U.S. intelligence assessments, the Khorasan militants have been trying to make or obtain explosives that can be slipped past airport security. Among their sources, officials said, has been al-Qaida's Yemen affiliate, which has put bombs on airplanes, though the bombs failed to explode.

The fear is that the Khorasan militants will provide these sophisticated explosives to their Western recruits who could sneak them onto U.S.-bound flights.

News stories last month, including a Sept. 13 report by The Associated Press that first disclosed the group's significance as a terrorist threat, led some members to flee before the U.S. military had a chance to strike their known locations, U.S. officials said.

One Khorasan leader, Muhsin al-Fadhli, has been eulogized on jihadi web sites, but American officials are not convinced that he is dead. They said they believe that another senior militant was killed, but have declined to name him.

A second Khorasan figure, a French militant named David Drugeon, is believed to be alive. Drugeon, who was born in the Brittany region and converted to Islam as a youth, spent time with al-Qaida in the tribal areas of Pakistan before traveling to Syria, French officials say.

He was identified as a member of the Khorasan Group by two U.S. officials who spoke on condition of anonymity to discuss classified information.

___

Associated Press writer Bassem Mroue in Beirut contributed to this report.

Follow Ken Dilanian on Twitter at https://twitter.com/KenDilanianAP







News of the terrorist cell's growing threat alerted key members to scatter before the U.S. airstrikes.
Plotting against America?



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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/10/2014 2:10:33 PM
Where is Kim Yong Un?

N.Korean leader apparent no-show at major event

Associated Press


CBSTV Videos
North Korean leader vanishes from public eye


SEOUL, South Korea (AP) — For the first time in three years, North Korean leader Kim Jong Un wasn't on a list of dignitaries at a celebration of the anniversary of the founding of the ruling Workers' Party. The apparent no-show will add to mounting speculation that something is amiss with the authoritarian leader, who hasn't been seen publicly in more than a month.

An official state media dispatch listed senior government, military and party officials who paid their respects at an event marking the party's 69th anniversary, but not Kim. It said a flower basket with Kim's name on it was placed before statues of his father and grandfather, both of whom also ruled North Korea. State media earlier said that the might of the party "is growing stronger under the seasoned guidance of Marshal Kim Jong Un."

Kim, who is thought to be 31, hasn't been seen performing his customary public duties in state media since he attended a concert Sept. 3. He had been walking with a limp and was more overweight than usual in images that aired before that. An official documentary from late last month described him as dealing with "discomfort," which led to international speculation that he may be ill.

North Korea strictly controls information about its government and elite, so much of what happens in Pyongyang's inner circles is hidden from the eyes of outsiders and even many average North Koreans. This leaves media in South Korea and elsewhere to speculate, sometimes wildly, about what's really going on. Some reports indicate that Kim could have gout, diabetes — even, from a British news story, a cheese addiction— much of it based on that single line in the documentary and unidentified sources speaking to South Korean media.

South Korean officials are playing down the speculation.

In Seoul, Unification Ministry spokesman Lim Byeong Cheol told reporters Friday that Kim appears to still be in charge of key affairs. Lim noted that a high-level North Korean delegation conveyed a greetings message to South Korean President Park Geun-hye during their surprise visit to South Korea last week. Lim said Pyongyang's state media has continuously reported about Kim's leadership.

North Korea has said nothing publicly about Kim's absence. But it is not the first time he has taken a break from the media spotlight — Kim Jong Un wasn't seen publicly for about three weeks in 2012, South Korean officials say — and a senior North Korean official on last week's visit to the South told a South Korean official that Kim was fine.

Without the extended absence, Kim not showing up Friday would not be all that important or unusual. Such anniversaries are generally given more weight when they are landmark years. A high-profile celebration, for example, is expected for next year's 70th anniversary of the ruling party.

Because Pyongyang is publicly acknowledging Kim's "discomfort," many analysts believe that he's unlikely to be suffering from anything particularly serious. When his father, Kim Jong Il, suffered major health problems late in his rule, state media said nothing. Kim Jong Il is believed to have suffered a stroke in 2008.

But each day that passes only adds to the speculation. Kim missed a meeting of the country's parliament late last month, and was absent again from a gathering this week to mark his late father's election as ruling party head. Kim has also not been seen in North Korean media reports greeting the athletes who returned from the Asian Games in the South, although they were given a lavish reception and heavy media coverage when they returned to the capital.

___

AP writers Hyung-jin Kim in Seoul and Eric Talmadge in Tokyo contributed to this report.








Kim Jong Un fails to make an appearance at a major political event, fueling speculation about his whereabouts.
Last seen on Sept. 3



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/10/2014 3:13:24 PM

A beheading in Oklahoma: Was it terrorism or workplace violence?

In the aftermath of tragedy, the residents of Moore don't want to be drawn into a politically charged debate


Holly Bailey
Yahoo News

Alton Nolen has been charged with murder in the first degree in the death of Colleen Hufford, in Moore, Okla. (Photo illustration by Yahoo News, Photos by AP)


She never saw him coming, according to police.

Just after 4 p.m. on Sept. 25, Colleen Hufford, a 54-year-old grandmother and worker at Vaughan Foods in Moore, Okla., was standing in the doorway of the front office in the food processing facility's main building when Alton Nolen, a co-worker who had just been suspended over an argument with another colleague, violently grabbed her from behind.

As horrified employees watched, Nolen, a 30-year-old production line worker with a criminal history, savagely sawed at Hufford's throat with a large kitchen knife he had gone home to retrieve, severing her head.

Nolen then went after Traci Johnson, a 43-year-old co-worker, viciously slashing her face and her throat in an attempt to decapitate her, too. But his bloody rampage came to an abrupt end when he was shot and wounded by the company's top executive, who also happens to be a reserve deputy sheriff. Johnson, while severely wounded, survived.

Nolen, who was charged with first-degree murder last week and is likely to face the death penalty, "openly admitted to beheading" Hufford and trying to do the same to Johnson, according to a court affidavit. Authorities said he told investigators he had felt "oppressed" at work and was angry with Johnson, who had filed the complaint that led to his suspension. Johnson, who is white, and Nolen, who is African-American, had gotten into an argument about race, according to law enforcement officials.

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In this undated photo provided by the Hufford family, Colleen Hufford, right, is pictured with her husband, K.C. Hufford, relaxing in their home in Moore, Okla. (AP Photo/Courtesy Hufford Family)

In this undated photo provided by the Hufford family, Colleen Hufford, right, is pictured with her husband, K.C. …

"He didn't like white people," Cleveland County District Attorney Greg Mashburn said at a press conference last week, declining to elaborate further on their altercation. While Nolen told police he had deliberately gone after Johnson and planned to attack two other people, Hufford had not been a specific target, Mashburn said. She was just in the wrong place at the wrong time, the first person Nolen ran into on what would be a horrifically bloody Thursday afternoon in a sleepy suburb where major crime, especially something like this, is almost unheard of.

But as residents of Moore grapple with the shock of what happened in their town, the gruesome nature of the crime has also sparked a politically charged question: Was it an act of Islamist terrorism or an extreme case of workplace violence?

Mashburn and other local officials have so far described what happened at Vaughan Foods as a horrifying but random case of an angry worker lashing out. But the grisly attack came after months of highly publicized beheadings by the Islamic State militant group and just days after the FBI warned local law enforcement officials around the country to be on guard against domestic attacks by supporters of the group, also known as ISIS or ISIL.

While the FBI says it has found no links so far between Nolen and the Islamic State or other extremist groups, there is little doubt he sympathized with their cause. Nolen, who had recently converted to Islam while serving time in prison for drug and assault charges, posted long anti-American screeds to his Facebook page, where he was listed under the name Jah'Keem Yisrael. On the page, which has since been removed, he published photos of Osama bin Laden and militant fighters as well as warnings to people who did not adhere to Muslim beliefs.

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A screen grab of Alton Nolen's Facebook page where he was listed under the name Jah'Keem Yisrael.

A screen grab of Alton Nolen's Facebook page where he was listed under the name Jah'Keem Yisrael.

On March 7, Nolen shared a gruesome photo of the aftermath of a beheading, and in his last Facebook post, published on Sept. 23, he warned of the sinful world's end. "This is [sic] the last days," Nolen wrote.

Police said they were investigating reports that Nolen had been trying to recruit co-workers to Islam, a detail that has fueled concerns about a terror link. And Mashburn said Nolan apparently yelled out phrases in Arabic as he was carrying out the attacks, though the D.A.'s office is still investigating exactly what was said.

Law enforcement officials have acknowledged that Nolen's extremist views probably influenced how he targeted his co-workers. "Obviously, there was some sort of infatuation with beheading," Mashburn told reporters. But, he reiterated, the attack still seems to have been driven more by the disagreement about race than by religion.

But others — mostly outside of Moore — disagree, insisting that Nolan's extreme views and the fact that he was apparently mimicking the violence perpetrated by jihadist groups overseas justifies viewing the attack as an act of terror. At the state capitol, a group of Republican state House members who make up the Oklahoma Counterterrorism Caucus issued a statement warning of the "dangers posed to this country and other freedom-loving peoples by Sharia," or Islamic law, and said that Nolen's actions should be deemed terrorism.

"The feds say this is workplace violence, but people know that's not true," said state Rep. John Bennett, a Republican who has been criticized in the past for making anti-Muslim remarks.

His words were echoed by Texas Gov. Rick Perry, who told Fox News that the attack was "an act of violence that is associated with terrorism." Perry, a possible contender for the 2016 Republican presidential nomination, said, "Americans aren't confused about what this is. ... I think any rational thinking American is going to look at this and go, 'This is more than just normal workplace violence.'"

And in Washington, Rep. Frank Wolf, a Virginia Republican, sent a letter to Attorney General Eric Holder last week calling on the Obama administration to "not be quick to just dismiss this as workplace violence."

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Soldiers hold a candlelight vigil at Fort Hood, Texas, Friday, Nov. 6, 2009. Authorities said Maj. Nidal Malik Hasan shot and killed 13 people at Fort Hood, Texas on Thursday. (AP Photo/LM Otero)

Soldiers hold a candlelight vigil at Fort Hood, Texas, Friday, Nov. 6, 2009. Authorities said Maj. Nidal Malik …

Wolf likened the event to the 2009 shooting rampage at Fort Hood, when Maj. Nidal Hasan, an Army psychiatrist angry over the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, killed 13 people and injured dozens more. Hasan was later found to have exchanged emails with Anwar al-Awlaki, a cleric and al-Qaida leader who was eventually killed in a 2011 drone strike, and during his trial, Hasan said he had committed the act to show support for the Taliban.

But the Obama administration, in a decision that continues to be controversial, called the 2009 attack "workplace violence" instead of terrorism, depriving victims of combat-related awards and benefits.

In his letter to Holder, Wolf warned the administration to not allow "political correctness to drive the investigation" in Oklahoma. "Whether the Nolen investigation ultimately shows he communicated directly with terrorists abroad or was independently inspired by the recent ISIS beheading videos, there is no question this attack represents a direct threat from radicalized Islamic extremists to the American people," Wolf wrote.

Until recently, Moore, located just south of Oklahoma City, had been more accustomed to the violence inflicted by Mother Nature than human beings. In May 2013, a large swath of the city was wiped out by a deadly EF5 tornado, one of the strongest storms on record and the fifth twister to hit Moore in 15 years. (In a tragic twist, Hufford had lost her home in the 2013 tornado, which missed the Vaughan plant by barely a mile.) The storm killed 25 people, including 10 children, and earned Moore the reputation as the unluckiest city in America when it comes to bad weather. And now, the national spotlight is on Moore again, for another unimaginable moment of horror.

"The mood is just shock. It's eerie to think of it. It's not something that anybody anticipated happening, let alone in a place like Moore," said Rep. Tom Cole, a Republican congressman who lives just down the road from the Vaughan plant. "And at the same time you think, gosh, do we need to be in the national news again with some sort of tragedy?"

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A woman wearing a shirt that reads Were Still Standing, Vaughan Food, 9-25-2014, arrives for the funeral of Colleen Hufford at Southgate Baptist Church in Moore, Okla., Friday, Oct. 3, 2014. (AP Photo/Sue Ogrocki)

A woman wearing a shirt that reads Were Still Standing, Vaughan Food, 9-25-2014, arrives for the funeral of Colleen …

But unlike the aftermath of the tornado, when the national spotlight meant help for a town desperate to rebuild and recover, the latest round of attention has been mostly unwelcome. Many people in Moore declined to be quoted about the subject, wary of being drawn into a politically charged debate that, as one person put it, "doesn't even seem to be about what happened here." But off the record, most people contacted by Yahoo News for this story suggested that they don't think what happened at Vaughn Foods was terrorism but rather a hideous act committed by a deranged young man who had problems long before he converted to Islam.

Though the mosque that Nolen attended in Oklahoma City reported receiving threats after the beheading, the mood in Moore has been one of shock but calm — a reaction from a city that is well practiced at dealing with tragedy in the national spotlight. But it's also the reaction of a city that, in spite of being firmly positioned in the Bible Belt, is perhaps more tolerant than some outsiders might expect.

"There's been no protests, no riots, no ugly incidents … just a feeling of, before we rush to any judgment, let's let law enforcement do their job," Cole said. "They are going to look at this about as thoroughly at the local, state and federal level as they can, and I think people generally trust that."



Oklahoma beheading sparks heated debate


Authorities acknowledge that a man’s extremist views likely influenced his acts against co-workers.
Terrorism or workplace violence?

"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/10/2014 11:52:02 PM

Angry protesters yell at riot police in St. Louis

Associated Press

Wochit
'Weekend Of Resistance' Planned In Ferguson


ST. LOUIS (AP) — Protesters angered by the fatal shooting of a black 18-year-old by police faced off with officers in south St. Louis for a second night as accusations of racial profiling prompted calls for a federal investigation ahead of a weekend of planned rallies and civil disobedience.

State and city leaders have urged the Justice Department to investigate the death of Vonderrit D. Myers in the Shaw neighborhood Wednesday night, fearing he was targeted because he was black. Police say the white officer who killed Myers was returning fire, but Myers' parents say he was unarmed.

"This here was racial profiling turned deadly," state Sen. Jamilah Nasheed, a St. Louis Democrat, said at a news conference Thursday.

Myers' death comes two months after the Aug. 9 fatal shooting of Michael Brown, a black unarmed 18-year-old, by a white police officer in nearby Ferguson. Brown's killing sparked dozens of often violent protests in the St. Louis suburb. A state grand jury is deciding whether Officer Darren Wilson will face charges in his death.

Late Thursday night following a quiet candlelight prayer vigil for Myers, hundreds of people joined a more rowdy gathering in Shaw to protest his death.

Police in riot gear lined up on a high street, flanked by brand name stores and restaurants. Protesters yelled abuse and profanities to taunt the officers, who silently stood their ground. Police helicopters buzzed above the neighborhood. Officers used pepper spray to force the crowd back.

One officer was injured when he was struck in the arm by a thrown brick, police spokeswoman Schron Jackson said. Eight protesters were arrested — five for unlawful assembly, two for property damage and one for possession of marijuana. Jackson said one business, the Medicine Shoppe, was damaged, as were two police vehicles.

Some protesters burned the American flag, while others banged on drums and shouted "This is what democracy looks like!" Some slammed the sides of police vans. Broken glass littered the street.

Eventually the protesters backed off, moving a couple of blocks away. Riot police remained in the area.

Organizers say thousands of activists and protesters from around the country are expected to come to the St. Louis area for four days of rallies, marches and civil disobedience to protest the Ferguson shooting, racial profiling and police violence. The events, which start Friday and include a march Saturday in downtown St. Louis, have taken on added urgency in the wake of Myers' death.

"This is a racial powder keg," said Jerryl Christmas, a St. Louis attorney who was among more than 20 black leaders who joined Nasheed at a news conference Thursday outside police headquarters. "All this is going to do is escalate the situation."

Police say Myers was both armed and aggressive, using a stolen gun to shoot at the officer.

Syreeta Myers said her son was holding a sandwich, not a gun. "Police lie. They lied about Michael Brown, too," she told The Associated Press by phone Thursday.

St. Louis Police Chief Sam Dotson said the officer spotted Myers and two other males at around 7:30 p.m. Wednesday while working a security job and patrolling near the Missouri Botanical Gardens. Dotson said the officer, who was off-duty but wearing his uniform, became suspicious when one of them started to run.

He chased them, first in his car and then on foot, Dotson said.

During the chase, he got into a physical altercation with Myers, who ran up a hill, turned and fired at the officer, the chief said. The officer, who wasn't hurt, shot back.

Ballistic evidence shows Myers fired three shots before his gun jammed, Dotson said. Police said they recovered the 9 mm gun, which was reported stolen on Sept. 26.

The officer fired off 17 rounds. Preliminary autopsy results show a shot to the head killed Myers, according to medical examiner Dr. Michael Graham.

The St. Louis Post-Dispatch reported that Graham said Myers was shot six or seven times in the lower extremities and the fatal shot entered his right cheek.

Authorities have not released the name of the 32-year-old officer, who has been with the police department for six years. He is on paid administrative leave, pending the outcome of an investigation.

An attorney for the officer told the newspaper that his client served with the U.S. Marines in Iraq and was "shaken up" by the incident. He called claims that Myers was carrying a sandwich, not a gun, "ridiculous."

Online court documents show that Myers was free on bond when he was killed. He had been charged with the unlawful use of a weapon, a felony, and misdemeanor resisting arrest in June.

Myers' was the third fatal shooting of a black male by St. Louis-area police since Brown's death.

"It's imperative that we began to heal this community," Nasheed said. "This community has been broken down. We have too many deaths at the hands of police officers."

___

Associated Press writer Bill Draper in Kansas City, Missouri, contributed to this report.








Demonstrators fill the streets for a second night after the fatal police shooting of a black teenager.
'This is a racial powder keg'



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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Luis Miguel Goitizolo

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RE: ARE WE NOW IN THE END TIMES?
10/11/2014 12:00:09 AM

Jihadists seize Kurdish HQ in Syria's Kobane, massacre feared

AFP

A picture taken in the southeastern village of Mursitpinar on October 10, 2014 shows smoke rising from the Syrian town of Ain al-Arab, known as Kobane by the Kurds (AFP Photo/Aris Messinis)


Suruc (Turkey) (AFP) - Islamic State jihadists captured the headquarters Friday of Kurdish fighters defending the Syrian border town of Kobane, with a UN envoy warning thousands would likely be massacred if it falls to them.

Outgunned Kurdish militia were struggling to prevent the jihadists closing off the last escape route for civilians still in the area, prompting an appeal for urgent military assistance.

US-led warplanes have intensified air strikes against IS, which has been attacking Kobane for three weeks, but the Pentagon has warned that, without a ground force to work with, there are limits to what can be done.

Neighbouring Turkey has so far refrained from any action against the jihadists on its doorstep, despite four straight nights of protests among its own large Kurdish minority that have left 31 people dead.

The jihadists' advance has brought the front line to just 1.3 kilometres (little more than three-quarters of a mile) from the border.

IS now controls 40 percent of Kobane, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

"The capture of the headquarters will allow the jihadists to advance on the border post with Turkey to the north of the town," its director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.

"If they achieve that, they will have the Kurdish forces inside Kobane completely surrounded."

As fighting raged, an IS militant carried out a suicide car bomb attack to the west of the Kurdish headquarters that killed two defenders, and 10 Kurds were killed in an IS ambush on the south side of town, the Observatory said.

US planes conducted nine new airstrikes in Syria on Thursday and Friday, the US military said.

And the Observatory said four strikes hit in the vicinity of the Kurdish headquarters on Friday afternoon.

An AFP correspondent on the Turkish side of the border saw a cloud of white smoke rising above Kobane after coalition strikes Friday.

- Thousands could be 'massacred' -

UN envoy for Syria Staffan de Mistura warned that 12,000 or so civilians still in or near Kobane, including 700 mainly elderly people in the town centre, "will most likely be massacred" by IS if the town falls.

Kobane was "literally surrounded," except for one narrow entry and exit point to the border, de Mistura said.

The envoy called on Turkey, "if they can, to support the deterrent actions of the coalition through whatever means from their own territory."

"We would like to appeal to the Turkish authorities in order to allow the flow of volunteers at least, and their equipment to be able to enter the city to contribute to a self-defence operation," he said in Geneva.

The statement marked an unusual one by the United Nations, which usually strives to stay neutral in conflicts, but de Mistura explained the rare appeal by the precarious situation in the border town.

The coordinator of the US-led campaign against IS, retired US general John Allen, was to hold a second day of talks in Ankara after the NATO ally insisted it could not be expected to take ground action against the jihadists alone.

- 'Willing to die' -

Kobane activist Mustafa Ebdi said the IS militants were using civilian cars with Kurdish flags to avoid coming under attack by coalition aircraft.

He said the risk of Kobane falling was high, and described the town as a "symbol of resistance to IS in Syria."

"Every Kurdish fighter is willing to die," he said.

With the world media gathered just across the border, the conquest of Kobane would be a highly visible symbolic victory for the extremists.

The situation is complicated by the close ties between the town's Kurdish defenders and the outlawed Kurdistan Workers Party, which has waged a three-decade insurgency for self-rule in southeastern Turkey.

Ankara has been deeply reluctant to allow weapons or Kurdish fighters to cross the border.

But Salih Muslim, leader of the main Kurdish political party in Syria, the Democratic Union Party, told AFP the Kurds are not a threat to Turkey and called for urgent help.

"It would be very good if Turkey urgently opens its soil for the passage of military weapons, not Turkish soldiers, for Kobane," he said.

More than 180,000 people have been killed in Syria since an uprising against President Bashar al-Assad's regime began in 2011, escalating into a multi-sided civil war that has drawn thousands of jihadists from overseas.

Regime bombardment and air strikes killed at least 21 civilians, eight of them children, in the south and northeast of the country Friday, the Observatory said.

In Iraq, meanwhile, IS fighters executed 13 people, including a cameraman Raad al-Azzawi who worked for a local television station.






A U.N. envoy warns that at least 500 mostly elderly people are trapped inside the Kurdish border town.
Many more stuck nearby



"Choose a job you love and you will not have to work a day in your life" (Confucius)

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