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Kurds burst into EU parliament to protest Islamic State

Kurdish demonstrators have staged sit-in in European parliament as well as protesting in Turkey and France against lack of action against IS in Kobane
In Turkey police uses tear gas and water cannon against Kurdish demonstrators protesting against IS (AFP)
By AFP
Dozens of Kurdish demonstrators burst into the European Parliament in Brussels on Tuesday to protest the Islamic State group's attack on the town of Kobane on Syria's border with Turkey.
 
Brandishing Kurdish flags and effigies of their jailed separatist leader Abdullah Ocalan, the men and women broke through a police barrier to enter the hall of the building. 
 
They staged a sit-in while several European members of parliament came to meet with them.
 
"We will fight Islamic State," the head of the socialist group in parliament, Gianni Pittella, told the protesters, drawing applause.
 
European Parliament President Martin Schulz said he met with the group's leaders and told them to end their protest peacefully.
 
But he also told them he fully shared their concerns about the situation for civilians in Kobane as well as that more broadly in Syria and Iraq, and promised to convey their message to NATO.
 
"I reiterated the support of the European Parliament for the international coalition fighting against the Islamic State in Syria and Iraq," he said.
 
Kurds also continued their protests across France on Tuesday, including around 500 people who gathered outside the foreign ministry in Paris calling for "solidarity with the Kurdish resistance". 
 
"Our people are facing a massacre, a genocide. It is no longer time for debate, there must be a reaction now," one of the organisers told the crowd. 
 
Marseilles saw its fourth Kurdish demonstration in just 10 days, with an estimated 1,500 people taking to the streets. There were smaller protests in Nice, Bourdeaux and Toulouse.
 
Turkey warned on Tuesday that the Islamic State was on the verge of seizing Kobane even as US and Arab warplanes launched fresh strikes on IS positions near the Kurdish town. 
 
The Kurdish protest in what is supposed to be a secure area occurred while confirmation hearings were taking place for the new team headed by incoming European Commission chief Jean Claude Juncker. 
 
The parliament's security services said they would open a probe into the incident

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