The Standard (St. Catharines)

Raqqa liberated

SDF combing terror capital for mines, Islamic State sleeper cells

- SARAH EL DEEB

BEIRUT — U.S.-backed Syrian forces liberated the city of Raqqa on Tuesday from Islamic State militants, a senior commander said, in a major defeat for the collapsing extremist group that had proclaimed it to be the capital of its “caliphate.”

Although clashes in Raqqa have ended, the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces are in control, combing the city in northern Syria for mines and searching for any Islamic State sleeper cells, Brig. Gen. Talal Sillo said.

Col. Ryan Dillon, a spokesman for the U.S.-led coalition, said it has not yet received official reports that the city was cleared, describing mines and booby traps throughout Raqqa that have killed returning civilians and senior SDF commanders in recent days. One of those killed Monday was the head of the internal security force affiliated with the SDF.

Another challenge for the troops is searching the tunnels that were dug by the militants around the city, Dillon said.

“This will take some time, to say that the city is completely clear,” he said. “We still suspect that there are still (ISIS) fighters that are within the city in small pockets.”

The loss of Raqqa will deprive the militants of a major hub for recruitmen­t and planning, Dillon said, because the city attracted hundreds of foreign fighters and was a place where attacks in the Middle East and Europe were planned. He added that the militants remain active in Syria, farther south around the eastern province of Deir el-Zour.

“This has been the wellspring of (ISIS) as we know it,” he said. But he stressed that the military defeat of the militants “doesn’t mean the end of (ISIS) and their ideology.”

Dozens of militants who refused to surrender made their last stand earlier Tuesday in Raqqa’s sports stadium, which the group had turned into a notorious prison in the more than three years it held the city.

The SDF forces earlier captured Raqqa’s main hospital, the other last remaining Islamic State holdout that had served both as a medical facility and a command centre. The SDF fighters have not gone through it to clear it, Dillon said.

Dillon said the coalition has not carried out any airstrikes in the past three days to allow civilians to leave. The SDF has also called on Islamic State fighters to surrender, and about 350 have turned themselves in, he said, adding that none were high-value targets.

After the group seized Raqqa from other Syrian rebels in early 2014, it transforme­d the once-vibrant metropolis into the epicentre of its brutal rule where opponents were beheaded.

Islamic State militants had been cornered in and around the stadium, and it was not immediatel­y clear after Sillo’s statement whether any were still inside it.

“The stadium is a huge structure with undergroun­d rooms and tunnels. There are also buildings around it” still under the control of Islamic State, SDF spokesman Mustafa Bali said.

A senior Kurdish commander said later that the stadium has been checked and cleared of land mines. SDF forces raised their own flag in the stadium, he added.

Earlier, he said 22 militants were killed in the advance on the hospital. With the capture of the hospital, the last black Islamic State flag was taken down, according to the Kurdish-run Hawar news agency.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said more than 1,000 civilians were killed in the campaign to liberate the city.

 ?? HAWAR NEWS AGENCY VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? This frame grab from video released Tuesday by the Hawar News Agency shows fighters from the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces celebratin­g their victory in Raqqa, Syria.
HAWAR NEWS AGENCY VIA THE ASSOCIATED PRESS This frame grab from video released Tuesday by the Hawar News Agency shows fighters from the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces celebratin­g their victory in Raqqa, Syria.

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