Suicide bomber 'kills five Kurdish police' in Syria

Suicide bomber 'kills five Kurdish police' in Syria
Five Kurdish policemen have been killed, and four others wounded, after an attack at a checkpoint in Syria's city of Qamishli.
1 min read
30 April, 2016
Control of Qamishli is split between Kurdish militia and pro-regime fighters [Getty]

A suicide bomber killed five Kurdish policemen at a checkpoint in Syria's divided northeastern city of Qamishli on Saturday.

Four others were wounded in the attack on the city's demarcation line, according to Jowan Ibrahim, the commander of the Kurdish police known as the Asayish.

It was not immediately clear who carried out the attack, but the Islamic State (IS) group has claimed previous bombings in the mainly Kurdish city.

Control of Qamishli is split between Kurdish militia and pro-regime fighters, who agreed a truce last week after several days of rare clashes.

The army and the Kurds have coordinated on security against Islamic State group in surrounding Hasakeh province, but tensions have built up between the sometimes-rival authorities.

The army and its militia ally, the National Defence Forces, control Qamishli airport and parts of the city, as well as areas of the provincial capital Hasakeh to the south.

Nearly all of the rest of the province is controlled by the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG), who have declared an autonomous region across the mainly Kurdish northern areas they control.

The YPG is regarded by the Pentagon as the most effective fighting force against IS on the ground in Syria.