The National - News

Separate forces start push against ISIL in Deir Ezzor

- DAVID ENDERS

US-backed forces and the Syrian army advanced in separate offensives against ISIL in eastern Syria on yesterday.

The Syrian Democratic Forcesaime­d to push out the extremists from territory east of the Euphrates River.

Meanwhile, Syrian government forces – supported by the Lebanese group Hizbollah and Russian air power – seized an oilfield from ISIL on the other side and recaptured part of a road linking Deir Ezzor to ISIL-held territory downstream.

Ahmed Abu Khawlah, who leads the SDF’s Deir Ezzor Military Council, told of the struggle in the village of Abu Fas in Syria’s north-east Hasakeh province.

He said his forces started fighting to flush out ISIL from territory in Hasakeh province and further south in the strategica­lly vital province of Deir Ezzor.

“Pivoting towards Deir Ezzor was inevitable. We are taking the first step to liberate territory east of the Euphrates River in Deir Ezzor,” Abu Khawlah told Agence France-Presse.

The Syrian government said its troops were attempting to break a nearly year-long ISIL siege on a military airport on the south-western side of Deir Ezzor.

The Syrian army’s push in to the city has allowed aid shipment to reach civilians by land for the first time in years.

For more than a year, the World Food Programme has been airdroppin­g supplies to besieged areas.

Ingy Sedky, a spokeswoma­n for the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross in Damascus, said hygiene kits, food parcels and medicine were delivered for 80,000 people.

“What we hear is that there is a lack of food and that the humanitari­an aid that was provided before by airdrops was insufficie­nt,” Ms Sedky said yesterday.

Meanwhile, the US-led coalition fighting ISIL said on Friday that it ended its surveillan­ce of buses carrying militants in eastern Syria after a request from the Russian government.

“To ensure the safe de-escalation of efforts to defeat ISIL, coalition surveillan­ce aircraft departed the adjacent airspace at the request of Russian officials during their assault on Deir Ezzor,” the US Central Command said.

Eleven buses had been stranded in eastern Syria for more than a week after the US sought to block the transfer of ISIL fighters from the Lebanese-Syrian border to Al Bukamal, an ISIL-controlled city near the Syrian-Iraqi border.

The US and members of the Iraqi government said the deal – negotiated between the extremists and Hizbollah – would allow them to cross the border into Iraq and join other ISIL fighters there.

The convoy had been stalled at the border of ISIL-controlled territory and the Assad forces’ front line.

But that line has moved farther east into ISIL-controlled territory in recent days as the Assad forces, supported by Russian and Syrian air power – are now fighting on the outskirts of Deir Ezzor.

“The regime’s advance past the convoy underlines continued Syrian responsibi­lity for the buses and terrorists,” said Brig Gen Jon Braga, the director of operations for the coalition.

“As always, we will do our utmost to ensure that the ISIL terrorists do not move toward the border of our Iraqi partners.”

On Friday, Lebanon held a state funeral for the 10 soldiers who were killed by ISIL.

Their bodies were recovered after at least 300 ISIL fighters withdrew last month from northern Lebanon to Syria, where they boarded buses that were to take them to Al Bukamal.

Families of the 10 soldiers have expressed frustratio­n that no one from ISIL would be brought to justice.

“There was an evacuation deal, but there was no justice component. There were people who had committed crimes – executions – and they get a free pass,” said Nadim Houry, Human Rights Watch’s director of its counter-terrorism programme.

The US-led coalition bombed roads to prevent the buses from reaching Al Bukamal, killing more than 80 militants and threatenin­g to kill anyone that strayed too far from the buses.

There were also claims that the US military stopped aid reaching the stranded buses, which the military denied.

“This convoy was probably half civilian,” Mr Houry said. “We know for a fact that there were families and women and kids. And like so many civilians in Syria, they end up trapped between all these players.”

 ?? Reuters ?? Ahmed Abu Khawlah, a commander of the SDF, says his forces have started fighting to flush out ISIL in Deir Ezzor
Reuters Ahmed Abu Khawlah, a commander of the SDF, says his forces have started fighting to flush out ISIL in Deir Ezzor

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates