(BBC) - Fighting has intensified in the besieged Syrian border town of Kobane, where Kurdish forces have been holding Islamic State at bay since September.
IS militants launched at least four suicide attacks, with reports saying at least 25 people were killed.
The first of the attacks was near the Turkish border crossing. It is thought to be the first fighting in that area.
The battle for Kobane has left hundreds of people dead and forced more than 200,000 to flee into Turkey.
The US-led coalition is supporting the town's defenders with air strikes.
Turkey has allowed some Kurdish fighters from Iraq to travel through its territory to assist in defending Kobane.
However, Turkey views Kurdish forces with suspicion, following a decade-long battle for autonomy by its own Kurdish minority.
IS controls large swathes of both Syria and neighbouring Iraq.
Clashes followed at the site of the attack and to the south-west of the town.
The UK-based activist group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said there were three more suicide bombings - one an individual with a suicide vest and the other two vehicle bombs.
As the clashes intensified, there were reports that IS had brought up tanks to join the fighting.
Meanwhile two US-led air strikes were carried out against IS positions in the east of Kobane.
In all, 25 people were killed in the clashes, most of them IS fighters, reports said.
IS has captured parts of the town and dozens of villages in the area around it in an offensive lasting more than two months.
But it has met stiff resistance from local Kurdish fighters, who have held about half the town assisted by small numbers of Iraqi Kurds and Syrian Arabs, and backed by US-led air strikes.
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