Houston Chronicle

ISIS holding civilians as human shields

Terrified residents of Syrian city trapped as final battle nears

- By Bassem Mroue and Lori Hinnant

BEIRUT — Residents of the northern Syrian city of Raqqa live in terror, trapped as a massive human shield in the Islamic State’s de facto capital ahead of the final battle with U.S.-backed opposition forces for the militant group’s last major urban stronghold.

A belt of land mines and militant checkpoint­s circle the city. Inside, all the men have been ordered to wear the jihadis’ garb of baggy pants and long shirts — making it difficult to distinguis­h Islamic State militants from civilians.

Hundreds if not thousands of Syrians who fled from other parts of the country now live in tents in Raqqa’s streets, vulnerable to both warplanes and ground fighting. Enormous tarps have been stretched for blocks in the city center to hide the militants’ movements from spy planes and satellites.

The estimated 300,000 people trapped inside live in terrifying uncertaint­y over how to find safety. Airstrikes by the U.S.-led coalition shake the city almost daily, mainly hitting northern neighborho­ods, amid reports of civilians killed by strikes in the nearby countrysid­e.

Leaflets dropped by coalition warplanes give confusing directions — one suggests areas closer to the Euphrates River are safer, but then another warns that boats crossing the river will be struck.

Mass panic erupted on Sunday, when Islamic State announced on mosque loudspeake­rs that U.S. strikes had hit a dam to the west of Raqqa. Residents were urged to flee imminent flooding, and thousands did. The militants allowed them into Islamic State-controlled countrysid­e nearby, as long as they left their possession­s behind, according to an activist who is in touch with people inside the city. Hours later, the militants announced it was a false alarm and urged everyone to return.

“The people really don’t know where to go,” said the activist, saying residents were caught between airstrikes, land mines and Islamic State fighters mingling among civilians. Isolating the city

To get a picture of Raqqa, The Associated Press talked to more than a dozen people with knowledge of the city, including residents who were still there or who had recently escaped, and activists with organizati­ons that track events through contacts inside, as well as diplomats, the U.S. military and aid groups. Almost all spoke on condition they not be identified, fearing for their own lives or the lives of their contacts.

Getting informatio­n is difficult. Militants constantly look for “spies.” One activist said two people had recently been put to death for suspected contact with the coalition. The only internet access is in a few approved cafes where patrons must give their names and addresses and endure spot checks by Islamic State fighters, who burst in and order everyone to raise their hands so computer screens can be inspected.

Raqqa, a provincial capital on the northern bank of the Euphrates, is the next major battle against the Islamic State group as Iraqi forces push to complete the recapture of northern Iraqi city of Mosul after nearly six months of fighting. For the Raqqa campaign, a multi-ethnic force of Syrian fighters, dominated by Kurds and supported by U.S. special forces, artillery and air power, have been maneuverin­g to isolate the city.

Concerns over civilian casualties have become a significan­t issue in the fight for Mosul. Amnesty Internatio­nal said Tuesday a significan­t spike in civilian casualties suggests the coalition is not taking enough precaution­s in its airstrikes. The U.S. has said it is investigat­ing the deaths, but American and Iraqi officials also suggested the militants blew up homes and blamed the coalition.

The Islamic State has sent most of its European fighters out of Raqqa farther east to the region of Deir el-Zour, deeper into its shrinking territory, according to Tim Ramadan, an activist with the group Sound and Picture, who remains in Raqqa, and Eyas Dass, editor of Al Raqqa Post, an opposition website that documents atrocities by Islamic State and the Syrian government.

That is probably a sign it wants to protect the foreigners, either for a propaganda campaign or to send them to carry out attacks in their home countries, they said. Both spoke on condition they be identified by the aliases they always use in their activities to protect themselves and families. Kurdish-led SDF closing in

Battle-hardened Syrians and Iraqis are leading the defense in Raqqa, bolstered by reinforcem­ents from those who withdrew from Mosul and other parts of Iraq. Dass said about 2,000 fighters and their families are en route from Iraq, and Ramadan said many are already in Raqqa. Rami Abdurrahma­n, head of the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, estimated more than 4,000 fighters in the city.

Earlier this month, the militants used their artillery in the city for the first time, a sign of how close the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces have come. The SDF has positions to the north, west and east — their closest position is about 5 miles from Raqqa to the northeast.

Coalition aircraft have taken out 18 bridges, including the main ones out of the city across the Euphrates, according to the coalition. Airstrikes have also focused on the former base of the Syrian military’s 17th Division, north of the city, now a major Islamic State base. Most of its buildings have been destroyed, activists say.

For days, dollar-bill-sized leaflets have fluttered from coalition planes to warn of impending strikes. More than 2 million have been dropped in two weeks, the coalition said.

One urged those living in tents to move closer to the Euphrates, according to a resident and the U.S. military in Baghdad. Another warned residents not to board the small boats that are the only way to cross the river, whether for daily errands or to flee Raqqa.

The cost of being smuggled out of Syria is a prohibitiv­e $3,000 to $4,000 a person, according to Sarmad al-Jilane, a Sound and Picture activist in Turkey.

 ?? Syria Democratic Forces via Associated Press ?? Fighters from the Syria Democratic Forces open fire on a position of the Islamic State group east of Raqqa, Syria. As the American– backed fighters bear down on Raqqa, the militants have trapped the city’s estimated 300,000 residents to use as human...
Syria Democratic Forces via Associated Press Fighters from the Syria Democratic Forces open fire on a position of the Islamic State group east of Raqqa, Syria. As the American– backed fighters bear down on Raqqa, the militants have trapped the city’s estimated 300,000 residents to use as human...

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