The crowd of mostly women and children sat behind a barbed wire
barrier along the border opposite the Turkish village of Dikmetas,
20 km (12 miles) from the Syrian Kurdish city of Ayn al-Arab, known
as Kobani in Kurdish.
The attack on Kobani prompted a Kurdish militant call to the youth
of Turkey's mainly Kurdish southeast to join the fight against
Islamic State (IS) and came days after the U.S. military said the
help of Syrian Kurds would be needed against the Islamist militants.
The number of Kurds on the border shrank from about 3,000 on
Thursday night, but more were arriving on foot from nearby villages,
carrying possessions in sacks, witnesses said. Turkish security
forces were not allowing them to cross the border.
"The weather was cold overnight so most went back to their villages.
They started coming back to the border this morning," said Halil, a
man in his 40s on the Turkish side of the border.
Turkish soldiers armed with rifles formed a line to maintain
security along the border but allowed locals on the Turkish side to
fling across bottles of water and bags of bread.
"People are continuing to come on foot and by vehicle. We expect
their numbers to swell to 3,000-4,000," said village official
Huseyin Gundogdu.
He said military and humanitarian officials had visited the area and
were telling the Syrian Kurds they would be offered aid further
along the Syrian side of the border nearer Kobani.
"AID WITHIN SYRIA'S BORDERS"
Prime Minister Ahmet Davutoglu said the governors of border
provinces in Turkey, where Kurdish militants have waged a
decades-long insurgency to push for greater autonomy, had been
ordered to extend aid to refugees on Syria's side of the border.
"We're ready to help our brothers who are building up at the borders
regardless of their ethnicity, religion and sect. But our priority
is to deliver aid within Syria's borders," he told reporters in
Ankara on Thursday.
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U.S. President Barack Obama said last week he would not hesitate to
strike IS, which has used Syria as a base to advance its plan to
reshape the Middle East according to its radical vision of Sunni
Islam.
The United States is conducting air strikes against Islamic State in
Iraq and last month Obama authorised surveillance flights over
Syria.
Islamic State fighters, armed with heavy weaponry including tanks,
have seized 21 villages near Kobani in the last 24 hours, the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, which tracks Syria's civil war, said
on Thursday.
Western states have expanded contact with the main Syrian Kurdish
party, the PYD, since Islamic State seized wide areas of Iraq in
June.
The YPG, the main Kurdish armed group in Syria, says it has 50,000
fighters and should be a natural partner in a coalition the United
States is trying to assemble to fight Islamic State.
But the Syrian Kurds' relationship with the West is complicated by
their ties to the Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK) - a group listed as
a terrorist organization in many Western states because of the
militant campaign it waged for Kurdish rights in Turkey.
(Writing by Daren Butler; Editing by Nick Tattersall and Janet
Lawrence)
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