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Kurds swear allegiance to al-Baghdadi and "Daash" undertakes to protect them ole Army in Diyala, etcetera in Aleppo


yota691
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457644662%20%281%29.jpg?itok=bcnkwLR5 Kurdish woman from the Syrian city of Kobanî longer tea in front of her family's tent in a refugee camp, Turkey, October 22 / October 2014

Dubai, United Arab Emirates (CNN) - showed a video cameraman dozens of men and children in a mosque in the town of Syrian Okhtarin located in the countryside of Aleppo, northern, preaches including a preachers Daash "and then urging them to chant allegiance" section of the Caliph Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, "vowing to protect the Kurds Army Ole in Diyala, the Iraqi province, and at the end Okhtarin in Aleppo countryside. " Reportedly the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which obtained a copy of the tape.

The Observatory said, quoting the sermon contained in the tape, saying Khatib collectively "Jinakm the locus of power and pride and empowerment, we bring ourselves to our brothers of Kurdish Muslims, in order to tell them we are your brothers in God, which befall you happen to us, though misfortune hated, and God will find an army tractor ole in Diyala (Iraq) and the end of the Akhtarin, cowering from the symptoms of the Muslims, and fighting for the blood of Muslims. "

And confirms Khatib to attend that "Islamic state today battling peshmerga in Iraq," not because they are Kurds, but we fight them because they are infidels, Mara'ou for the religion of Allah, wore for the religion of Allah, inviting them secular democracy, called for a secular party atone Lord God and Islam as a religion and Muhammad God bless him and a prophet. "

 

He asked al-Khatib, according to the Observatory, from the audience to sing behind the next section with the sincerity of faith in the pledge of allegiance, "the name of God the Merciful, pledge allegiance to the faithful, and the caliph Ibrahim Ibn Awad Ibn Ibrahim Al-Badri al-Husseini al-Quraishi Al-Baghdadi, the obedient in the activator and the impeller and hardship and ease, and on its impact hurry, and the establishment of the religion of God, and the Jihad enemy of God, and not to his family Nnazaa it, until we see them outright disbelief, we have proof of God in them, and what we say to God a martyr. "

And appeared in the video, which the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that he received a copy of a set of elements of the organization of the Islamic State "Daash" They are handing out leaflets on the outlaws citizens from the mosque, also showed footage a elements of the organization, which is going to meetings and interviews with citizens , he said One of them, "send a message to our people abroad, we are here in the village of Tel Battaal did not fight the Islamic state is not it any judgment or guilt," while the village of Tel Battaal another said that he swore allegiance he and his father and the people of his village, and that they "came to the allegiance of all the spaciousness released "in response to the question of the" Islamic state "element as to whether the organization forced him allegiance.

The tape shows, according to the Observatory, an elderly man, he says to the element "Daash" organization, which was being encounters pictured with citizens, "We are all of our one, and pray Kurdish, Arab and Turkmen shoulder to shoulder, not the language related to religion, and we are Sunni Muslims," ​​and the face of the old man talking to the element " Islamic State fluidly "Is not you American? And Alice with you from Russia? And Alice with you from Chechnya? "Replied, element" yes "to follow the old man's speech" since she entered the Islamic state we live safely and did not take anything until one of our money and Omlakena. "

Did not get CNN a copy of this tape, and can not verify the tape posted on the Internet and social networking sites content, and content published by former Syrian Observatory for Human Rights on his official website.

 

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Thanks Yota....I'm not buyin'  into this....These Kurdish people are living their lives under constant observation of ISIS. Their world is real and the threat of death by extreme means is real in actual visual terms. ISIS will murder each and everyone of them that show just the slightest commitment to any infidel that defies anything the homosexual pedophile Muhammad declared not of Islam religion...Have I mentioned I hate religions...What would you expect them to do say they were waiting on the Iraqi Army that threw down their weapons and ran a few months back or better yet wait for the US Troops who had to wait for the mid-term election before our Comedian-Idiot-Uncharged decided the Iraqi's needed support.  These people are trying to survive on a minute by minute, meal to meal conditions and then some guy with a camera sticks in their face to ask them what they think in the middle of town out in an isolated desert.... What would you say....

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Don't know if this is true or not... I guess it could be that some join out of fear and some out of evilness.

 

Seems evil lurks and can be recruited among any group of people anywhere in this world... Sad

 

Kurds help ISIS with terrain, language in battle for Kobani
Published November 04, 2014
 
Mideast%20Islamic%20State.jpg?ve=1&tl=1

This undated image posted on a militant website shows Abu Khattab al-Kurdi, or Abu Khattab the Kurd, one of the Islamic State group's top military commanders in the offensive on the Syrian city of Kobani. (AP/Jihadis website)

 

BEIRUT –  Ethnic Kurds are helping members of the Islamic State group in the battle for the key Syrian Kurdish town of Kobani, sharing their knowledge of the local terrain and language with the extremists, according to Iraqi and Kurdish officials.

 

It is not clear how many Kurds are aiding the estimated 3,000 Islamic State militants in the Kobani area -- and fighting against their own Kurdish brethren -- but activists say they are playing a major role in the 7-week-old conflict near the Turkish border.

 

A top military commander for the extremists in the town is an Iraqi Kurd, known by the nom de guerre of Abu Khattab al-Kurdi, helping them in the battle against fellow Kurds.

 

Officials with the main Syrian Kurdish force known as the People's Protection Units, or YPG, say they became aware of the Kurds among the mostly Sunni Muslim extremists early in the fighting.

 

As Kurdish fighters were defending the nearby Syrian village of Shiran in September, two Kurdish men with different accents and wearing YPG uniforms infiltrated their ranks, Kurdish officials said. Upon questioning, however, they were captured and admitted to fighting for the Islamic State group, the officials added.

 

Iraqi and Kurdish officials say many of the Kurdish fighters with the Islamic State group are from the northeastern Iraqi town of Halabja, which was bombed with chemical weapons by Saddam Hussein's forces in 1988, killing some 5,000 people.

 

Shorsh Hassan, a YPG spokesman in Kobani, said although most of the Kurdish jihadi fighters come from Iraq, some are from Syrian regions such as Kobani, Afrin and Jazeera. He added that the number of Syrian Kurds is small compared with the dozens of Iraqis fighting with the IS group.

 

"The fighter who is from Kobani is not like someone who hails from Chechnya with no idea about tracks and roads," Hassan said.

 

Thousands of militants from all over the world -- including north Africans, Asians and some Westerners -- have traveled to Syria and Iraq to join the ranks of the Islamic State group. Turkish nationals are among them, but it is unknown if any are fighting in Kobani.

 

Hassan said many of the Iraqi fighters were from Halabja, including al-Kurdi. Websites affiliated with the Islamic State group recently published several photographs of the young, bearded man, including some of him wearing the traditional Kurdish garb of baggy pants, and others of him standing in front of Kurds killed in Kobani.

 

In Baghdad, an Iraqi security official said al-Kurdi was a member of Ansar al-Islam, a Sunni militant group with ties to Abu Musab al-Zarqawi, the late leader of Al Qaeda in Iraq, who was active in the early 2000s. Al-Kurdi later joined the Islamic State group, the official said.

 

The Iraqi official said al-Kurdi is also from Halabja and is wanted by Iraqi authorities. He refused to give the man's real name when pressed by The Associated Press.

 

"Our latest information is that he is in Syria fighting in the Kobani area. He is an expert in mountainous areas," the Iraqi official said, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to the media.

 

"He is commanding the Kurdish group within Daesh because he is a Kurd," he added, using an Arabic acronym for the Islamic State group.

 

Halabja was known as a secular village and the home of Abdullah Goran, one of the best-known Kurdish poets in the 20th century and a member of the Iraqi Communist Party. But in the past three decades, Muslim preachers have become active and have turned it into one of Iraqi Kurdistan's most religiously conservative areas.

 

Still, most of the Kurds are moderate and secular-leaning Muslims.

 

Many Kurds in Iraq were stunned when they learned that Kiwan Mohammed, the 25-year-old goalkeeper of Halabja's soccer team, was killed last month in Syria while fighting for the Islamic State group in Kobani. Mohammed was identified by jihadi websites as Abu Walid al-Kurdi.

 

Dana Jalal, an Iraqi journalist who follows jihadi groups, said the Iraqi athlete left Syria in July 2013 and had not been heard of until his death.

 

Some 70 Iraqi Kurds, mostly from Halabja, went to fight in Syria with the Islamic State group, Jalal said. Most go through Turkey where they say they are going for tourism, but theu then they cross into Syria, and "some even take their wives with them," Jalal added.

 

Nawaf Khalil, the Europe-based spokesman for Syria's powerful Kurdish Democratic Union Party, said Kurdish fighters within the Islamic State group are invaluable in the Kobani battle because they know the geography, as well as the language and the mentality of fellow Kurds.

 

"A main part of their work is tapping (electronic surveillance) and intelligence-gathering. They might be also using some from the Kobani area to benefit from the geographical knowledge of the area," he said.

 

Mustafa Bali, a Kurdish activist in Kobani, said that by having Kurdish fighters, Islamic State extremists are trying to win the hearts and minds of Syrian Kurds in the area.

 

"Daesh is trying to tell the people of Kobani that it does not consider them enemies and its fighters include Kurds," Bali said.

 

 

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2014/11/04/kurds-help-isis-with-terrain-language-in-battle-for-kobani/

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