Mail OnlineTerror of the families trapped in ISIS’ crosshairs: Women and children take up arms in last, desperate stand in key border town
Tensions rise across Turkey while government does nothingBy Larisa Brown for the Daily Mail and John Hall and Jennifer Newton New ISIS footage shows militants in control of a hill overlooking Kobane
They say they will stop at nothing as they advance towards the town
Questions raised over effectiveness of airstrikes in defeating ISIS militants
Group has continued to gain territory despite weeks of Western bombing
U.S. airstrikes took place in besieged Syrian city of Kobane this morning
Strikes came one day after terrorists raised flag over a building in suburbs
Turkish prime minister says hitting ISIS from air will not stop fall of Kobane
Despite promising not to let it happen days ago Recep Tayyip Erdogan said fall of city is now imminent
His words come amid increasing anger across Turkey over lack of action
Children armed with AK-47s fought to defend the Syrian town of Kobane to the death today after a wave of U.S.-led airstrikes failed to stop Islamic State advances.
Thousands of stricken civilians were told to ‘flee from their villages’ as Kurdish officials warned they could not protect them against the onslaught as anger mounted across the border in Turkey over the government's seeming willingness to stand by and do nothing. Protests erupted in cities across the country including Istanbul and Ankara
Jihadists using tanks and advanced weaponry engaged in heavy street battles against outgunned Kurds in the key town on Syria’s border.
Whole families - including elderly women and children – stayed behind in a desperate attempt to stop fanatics gaining a major strategic victory.
The ISIS advance led to renewed calls for ground troops to support the Kurds as it became clear that airstrikes were not enough to stop the fall of the pivotal border town.
Six US-led airstrikes overnight Monday and yesterday appeared to slow the group’s shelling on the centre, destroying four armed vehicles, damaging a tank and killing fighters.
Kurdish forces pushed militants out of the eastern part of the town and managed to destroy a tank, six IS cars mounted with machines guns and kill scores of fighters in the south and east of the town.
But while a flag belonging to the Kurdish militias was still seen waving in the centre of Kobane today, government officials said the town was about to fall.
One resident described seeing ISIS fighters in the streets looking relaxed and casually walking around – but said they were soon killed by Kurdish fighters with superior knowledge of sites throughout the city.
It came as pictures emerged of entire families joining in the fight, including a boy barely aged 10 sat beside his father carrying an AK-47.
Another picture showed a teenage girl wearing a hoodie, jeans and ballet pumps while carrying a gun, and an elderly woman in a headscarf beside a girl young enough to be her daughter.
The three photographs were posted on social networking site Twitter yesterday, alongside the comment: ‘Kurdish family vs Isis terorist (sic) in Kobane. Kurds in Kobane need help!’
The pictures emerged after ISIS posted a chilling on social media, allegedly showing ISIS fighters in control of the strategic Mashta Nour hill, which overlooks the town of Kobane.
The video comes after questions have been raised over whether airstrikes will be enough to defeat Islamic State militants after Turkey's prime minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan said the town will fall within hours without extra ground support.
In the footage, one ISIS fighter says that with the help of god, they have taken over the hill, which overlooks the city.
He adds that the 'soldiers of Islam' are now 'crawling towards the city' and that they will destroy the infidels and take the city, despite the airstrikes.
He finishes by declaring the airstrikes will not stop them and that they will 'take the city.'
The new footage comes amid growing evidence that Western efforts are having little impact on ISIS - who have continued to take vast swathes of territory in since American airstrikes started in Iraq in August and a U.S./Arab coalition began bombing targets in Syria two weeks ago.
Sources on the ground say the terrorists have been able to easily avoid the airstrikes by operating from bases inside civilian buildings, and also by simply melting away into small groups whenever aircraft are overhead before re-emerging as a fighting force once the planes leave.
With ISIS continuing to take ground in both Iraq and Syria - including the possible capture of the strategically and symbolically important city of Kobane - Western airstrikes appear to be doing little to bring the militant group's reign of terror to an end.
Kurdish fighters in Kobane were among the first to suggest airstrikes would not be enough, with Idris Nassan, a senior spokesman, telling the Guardian: 'They are besieging the city on three sides, and fighter jets simply cannot hit each and every ISIS fighter on the ground.'
And Britain's former Chief of the Defence Staff General Lord David Richards has also warned that political leaders appear to have underestimated the scale of the task they face, and that the crisis is likely to require Western boots on the ground to make any real headway.
'Air power alone will not win a campaign like this. It isn't actually a counter-terrorist operation. This is a conventional enemy in that it has armour, tanks, artillery, it is quite wealthy, it holds ground and it is going to fight. So therefore you have to view it as a conventional military campaign,' he told the BBC.
'You either have to put your own boots on the ground at some point, or else you have to very energetically and aggressively train up those who will do that with us and for us. My worry at the moment is that the scale of the challenge isn't being met by the right scale of response,' he added.
Erdogan's suggestion that Kobane is 'about to fall' comes after Kurdish resistance forces vowed to fight ISIS to the death, saying they will do their utmost to prevent the Islamist 'monsters' massacring the city's 40,000 civilians.
The news comes as it was claimed up to 800 people may have been killed in fighting in Kobane over the past three weeks, as ISIS battled the brave Kurdish resistance and advanced in the city suburbs.
Smoke was seen coming from positions immediately behind the four-storey building this morning, with reporters stationed across the border in Turkey saying heavily armed police there had ordered people to stay indoors while the strikes take place.
Street fighting raged between Kurdish forces and ISIS fanatics yesterday, after the terror group advanced into the suburbs of Kobane.
The head of the Kurdish forces defending Kobane said late yesterday that ISIS forces were 300 metres inside the eastern district and were shelling the remaining neighbourhoods.
'We either die or win. No fighter is leaving,' Esmat al-Sheikh, leader of the Kobane Defence Authority, said.
'The world is watching, just watching and leaving these monsters to kill everyone, even children...but we will fight to the end with what weapons we have.'
ISIS wants to take Kobane to consolidate a dramatic sweep across northern Iraq and Syria, in the name of an absolutist version of Sunni Islam, that has sent shockwaves through the Middle East.
At least 400 people are known to have died in ISIS' three-week bombardment of Kobane, according the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights - a group monitoring violence in Syria.
The organisation explained it had documented 412 deaths from sources on the ground - including fighters on both sides of the conflict - but said the real figure was likely to be more than 800 dead.
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