Pittsburgh Post-Gazette

200 killed as IS fighters hit towns in southern Syria

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DAMASCUS, Syria — Islamic State group fighters ambushed a city and several villages in southern Syria on Wednesday, triggering ferocious clashes between residents and the militants that provincial health officials said killed morethan 200 people.

The coordinate­d attacks across the province of Sweida, which included several suicide bombings, shattered the calm of a region that has been largely insulated from the worst of the violence of Syria’s 7year-long civil war.

The suicide bomb blasts inside the provincial capital, also called Sweida, were apparently timed to coincide with attacks on villages in the eastern countrysid­e, creating mayhem across the province.

The attacks triggered deadly clashes between progovernm­ent fighters and residents who picked up weapons to defend their hometowns on one side and ISmilitant­s on the other.

By nightfall, the province’s health directorat­e had recorded 204 civilians killed and 180 wounded, according to local official Hassan Omar, making it the single bloodiest day for the province since the 2011 national revolt that sparked theongoing civil war.

Sultan Bou Ammar, a resident of the village of Shbiki, said some residents unwittingl­y opened their doors when militants knocked early Thursday morning, so unexpected was the attack.

“They kidnapped more than 40 people, all of them women or children,” Mr. Bou Ammar said.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring group said at least 183 people were killed, including 94 residents who were part of local defense militias that have the backing of the Syrian government. At least 45 IS militants were killed in the fighting.

Al-Ikhbariya state-run TV showed images from several locations in the province and its capital where the bombers blew themselves up.

The rare attacks in Sweida, populated mainly by Syria’s minority Druze, came amid a government offensive elsewhere in the country’s south. Government forces are battling the IS-linked group near the frontier with Israeliocc­upied Golan Heights and near the border with Jordan. The group also has a small presence on the eastern edge of Sweida province.

Since their offensive in June, Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces have retaken territorie­s controlled by the rebels along the Golan Heights frontier and are now fighting militants in the country’s southern tip.

IS has been largely defeated in Syria and Iraq, but still has pockets of territory it controls in eastern and southern Syria.

The extremist group boasted that its “soldiers” killed more than 100 people in Sweida. In a statement posted on the group’s social media channels, it said its militants carried out surpriseat­tacks on government and security centers, sparking clashes with Syrian troopsand allied militias.

Al-Ikhbariya said one of the suicide bombers hit a vegetable market in the city of Sweida just after 5 a.m., a busy time for the merchants at the start of their day.

The bomber drove through the market on a motorcycle and there detonated his explosives, the TV station said. A second attacker hit in another busy square in the city. Two other attackers blew themselves up as they were chased by security forces, the TV said.

The city of Sweida has largely been spared most of the violence that Syrian cities have witnessed in the years since the conflict started in 2011. The provinces’ religious and civil leaders have preached coexistenc­e with Damascus, even as cities elsewhere in the country heaved with protests.

But the largely rural province has suffered from emigration as weak employment prospects and conscripti­on pressures to serve in the national army have pushed men out.

Mr. Bou Ammar, from Shbiki, said there weren’t many men left to defend the village when the militants attacked.

For the southern offensive, government forces redeployed troops from Sweida province last month to attack rebels and IS-affiliate militants in the nearby provinces of Daraa and Quneitra.

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