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Video: Three wounded by IS rockets in Turkey

Video: Three wounded by IS rockets in Turkey
Three people were left injured after rockets from an IS-held area in Syria hit the border town of Kilis.
2 min read
07 April, 2016
Three people were wounded on Thursday when two "Katyusha-type" rockets fired from an area in Syria controlled by Islamic State group (IS) militants slammed into the centre of a Turkish town close to the Syrian border, according to local reports.

The rockets hit downtown Kilis at around 0545GMT, the Dogan news agency reported. Ambulances were sent to the scene as police threw a security cordon around the area.

Dogan said one of the rockets hit a building used by Syrian refugees and two of those wounded were Syrian citizens.

Another person was wounded by the second rocket and police also evacuated a school.

Pictures broadcast by Turkish television showed the rockets had badly damaged masonry and windows on one building.

Kilis, where, according to Turkish officials, Syrian refugees now outnumber the native Turkish population, has been hit several times by IS fire.

In March, two people - including a four-year-old child - were killed here by rocket fire, while in January a janitor was killed and pupil wounded when IS artillery hit a school.

Turkey has on occasion been accused by its western allies of not doing enough to combat the threat of IS, which captured swathes of Iraq and Syria right up to its border.

But Ankara is now playing a key role in the US-led anti-IS coalition and hosting foreign warplanes at its Incirlik airbase for strikes on the group.

The latest attack comes after Turkish armed forces launched repeated artillery strikes in recent weeks on IS positions in Syria.

A fragile ceasefire backed by Turkey has taken effect in Syria, but the deal does not apply to territory held by the IS group and al-Qaeda affiliate the Nusra Front.

Turkey has also been hit by attacks blamed on IS militants, including two deadly suicide bombings in Istanbul that targeted foreign tourists. Turkish officials have also blamed the uptick in violence on the actions of banned separatist armed group the Kurdistan Workers' Party, known as the PKK.


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