In Syrian Kurdish city, 26 AP Newssep 14, 2015 IS suicide car bombings kill DAMASCUS, Syria (AP) — Two car bombings, half an hour apart, killed 26 people on Monday in a predominantly Kurdish city in northeastern Syria, the country's state-owned media and activists reported, in an attack swiftly claimed by the Islamic State group. Among the victims of the explosions in the city of Hassakeh were a woman and her two children and several Kurdish fighters, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. The Islamic State group said in a statement that its two suicide bombers targeted a gathering Of Kurdish fighters and pro-regime militias. The bombers struck in two different Hassakeh neighborhoods. The state news agency SANA said at least 21 died in the bombing in the busy Mahatta neighborhood. Bodies were pulled from under the rubble of a collapsed building, the agency said, adding that the number of victlms was likely to rise. The second bomber detonated his explosives-laden vehicle in Khashman district on Hassakeh's northern outskirts, killing five people, including the woman and her children, SANA said. Syrian state TV broadcast footage from the two-story building that collapsed in the al-Mahatta explosion, which also left a large crater in the street. A man is seen holding a victim and weeping. The TV later said that authorities dismantled two other car bombs in the province. The Observatory, which has a network of activists on the ground, said those killed included 13 civilians, six Kurdish fighters from the local police force and seven pro-government militia members. The group said the first attack, in Khashman, targeted a Kurdish police force, while the second hit a base for a pro-government militia. In a statement posted on social media, the Islamic State group said two of its fighters blew
themselves up, one at in a graduation ceremony for Kurdish cadets and the other hit a base for the pro-government militia. Hassakeh has been scene of repeated attacks by IS militants. Syrian Kurdish fighters are largely in control of the city, which has pockets of government forces. IS militants have been battling the Kurdish forces and government troops in the province for months.The article explains about how the Islamic State Group's two bombings killed 26 people. After reading this article, I can clearly tell the writer is against the Islamic State group. I clearly agree with this, in that the Islamic State attacked the Syrian Kurdish City, and I believe it was unjust. I might be biased as I'm a Christian and I'm against Islamic groups, but I still believe it is not justifiable. The article puts Syria in a kind of weak light, when it shares that the civilians were attacked and were basically helpless. Which leaves us to reason that the Syrians were basically defenseless while the Islamic State bombed innocent people including civilians such as children. Overall, the article shows that the Islamic State didn't show a case of just proportionality."Townhall.com" 14 September. 2015. Townhall media. 14 September. 2015.
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