Iranian-Kurdish Female Fighters Train in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region

A group of Iranian Kurdish women, who have joined Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, take part in a training session in a military camp in Erbil, Iraq July 9, 2019. (Reuters)
A group of Iranian Kurdish women, who have joined Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, take part in a training session in a military camp in Erbil, Iraq July 9, 2019. (Reuters)
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Iranian-Kurdish Female Fighters Train in Iraq’s Kurdistan Region

A group of Iranian Kurdish women, who have joined Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, take part in a training session in a military camp in Erbil, Iraq July 9, 2019. (Reuters)
A group of Iranian Kurdish women, who have joined Kurdish Peshmerga fighters, take part in a training session in a military camp in Erbil, Iraq July 9, 2019. (Reuters)

Over 300 female volunteers from the Kurdistan Freedom Party in Iran (PAK), led by General Hussein Yazdanpanah, completed their combat and tactical training in one of the party's camps east of Erbil province in the Kurdistan region of Iraq.

PAK field commander Rebaz Sharifi announced that the volunteers completed their four-month training on light and medium weapons and are ready to take up the tasks that will be assigned to them.

Speaking to Asharq Al-Awsat, Sharifi said the fighters will be tasked with defending south of Erbil as well as secure the party’s headquarters and bases.

He explained that the training was supervised by party veterans and field commanders, who have gained extensive experience during their more than two-year war against ISIS in Nineveh.

The commander noted that weapons and military vehicles that the party’s fighters are using are the spoils of wars against ISIS and Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF), denying receiving any financial assistance from external or internal parties, including the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG).

“Unfortunately, the Regional Government has not provided us with any aid or funding. Otherwise, the performance of the party's fighters would have been much better,” asserting that the party entirely depends on itself.

Officially, the forces are not part of the Peshmerga, but they share duties, noted Sharifi, adding that they receive separate funding and training.

“Our party represents an anti-Iranian regime force fighting for the independence of Kurdistan Iran, but our duties of national defense and safeguarding the dignity of the Kurdish people is what we have in common with the Peshmerga.”

He also announced that PAK fighters are fully prepared logistically to participate in any battle against the Iranian regime.



Toll in Syria Opposition-army Fighting Rises to 242

Fighters from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) ride in military vehicles in the eastern outskirts of the town of Atarib, in Syria's northern province of Aleppo on November 27, 2024, during clashes with the Syrian army. (Photo by Abdulaziz KETAZ / AFP)
Fighters from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) ride in military vehicles in the eastern outskirts of the town of Atarib, in Syria's northern province of Aleppo on November 27, 2024, during clashes with the Syrian army. (Photo by Abdulaziz KETAZ / AFP)
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Toll in Syria Opposition-army Fighting Rises to 242

Fighters from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) ride in military vehicles in the eastern outskirts of the town of Atarib, in Syria's northern province of Aleppo on November 27, 2024, during clashes with the Syrian army. (Photo by Abdulaziz KETAZ / AFP)
Fighters from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) ride in military vehicles in the eastern outskirts of the town of Atarib, in Syria's northern province of Aleppo on November 27, 2024, during clashes with the Syrian army. (Photo by Abdulaziz KETAZ / AFP)

More than 240 people, mostly combatants, were killed as intense fighting approached Syria's northern Aleppo city after the opposition launched a major offensive on government-held areas this week, a monitor said Friday.
On Wednesday, Hayat Tahrir al-Sham (HTS) and allied Turkish-backed factions launched an attack on government-held areas in the northwest, triggering the fiercest fighting since 2020, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Rami Abdel Rahman, who heads the Observatory, said fighting reached two kilometers (1.2 miles) from the main northern city of Aleppo, where the group’s artillery shelling on student housing killed four civilians, according to state media.
"The combatants' death toll in the ongoing... operation in the Idlib and Aleppo countrysides has risen to 218," since Wednesday, said the British-based monitor with a network of sources inside Syria.
In addition to the fighters, it said 24 civilians were killed.
Syrian ally Russia launched air strikes that killed 19 civilians on Thursday, while another civilian had been killed in Syrian army shelling a day earlier, said the Observatory which on Thursday had reported an overall toll of about 200 dead, including the civilians.