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Australian Fighting with Kurds against IS Killed in Syria

An Australian who travelled to Syria to join Kurds battling jihadists has been killed, a monitor said Wednesday, adding he was the first Westerner to die fighting alongside the Kurds.

"An Australian man was killed in an assault on Tuesday by the Islamic State against a position of the Kurdish People's Protection Units (YPG) near Tal Hamis in Hasakeh province," said Syrian Observatory for Human Rights director Rami Abdel Rahman.

The Observatory had reported the fighter's death on Tuesday, but was unable to confirm his nationality until Wednesday.

"Dozens of Westerners have joined the YPG's ranks. There are foreigners fighting on all sides of Syria's war," said Abdel Rahman.

"They are volunteers, they don't get paid anything at all," he told Agence France-Presse.

"The YPG isn't actively recruiting foreigners, but people from countries like Canada, the United States, Britain, Spain, Australia, Holland, Austria and France have traveled to Syria to join their ranks," he said.

Some of them had previous combat experience because they had served in the army.

In December, Australia revealed that 20 of its citizens who had traveled to Syria and Iraq to join IS had been killed.

Australia also accused the jihadists of using foreign fighters as "cannon fodder, suicide bombers and "propaganda tools."

Kurds are fighting IS on multiple fronts, with backing from a U.S.-led coalition that launched strikes on jihadist positions in August, and Syria in September.

Westerners have also traveled to Iraq to join Christian groups battling IS, such as Dwekh Nawsha, whose name in the Assyrian language means self-sacrifice.

The group was formed after IS launched a major assault around the Mosul area of Iraq that displaced hundreds of thousands of Iraqis from their homes.

Source: Agence France Presse


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