Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Syria: Deadly fighting continues after 'Islamic State' prison break

Syrian Kurdish forces backed by US troops are trying to regain control of a prison housing "Islamic State" suspects. Kurdish authoritie­s previously said they had thwarted the breakout at the facility.

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Fighting at a prison in the northern Syrian city of al-Hasaka entered a fourth day on Sunday as the Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) continued to battle fighters from the extremist "Islamic State" (IS) group after a breakout at the facility.

The Kurdish forces said the militants attacked the prison once more on Sunday and tried to break the security cordon around it. In a statement, the SDF said the attack had been repelled and the IS fighters driven back into a residentia­l area. Another attack by IS militants coming from outside the city was also thwarted, a spokesman said.

Almost 80 IS members and 39 Kurdish fighters have been killed in the violence at the Ghwayran jail since it was first attacked by IS militants on Thursday, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights. The group, affiliated with the Syrian opposition, has been monitoring the country's conflict since it broke out in 2011.

The Observator­y said that at least seven civilians have also been killed in the fighting, which has seen US-led coalition forces carry out airstrikes in support of Kurdish forces. US troops were also reported to have taken up positions around the prison, which houses people suspected of belonging to IS.

What happened at the prison?

On Thursday, IS militants set off a car bomb near the prison gates, enabling dozens of inmates to escape.

The SDF said initially that it had foiled the prison breakout and arrested scores of militants. Later, however, it admitted that inmates had taken control of parts of the jail.

The Observator­y said that Kurdish forces had managed to recapture more than 100 detainees who had tried to escape but that many more remained on the run. Their exact numbers remain unclear.

Who is in the prison?

The Ghwayran jail is the largest facility where the SDF holds people suspected of affiliatio­n with the IS group, though it is unknown how many inmates are at the prison.

However, relatives of many inmates say they are young children or people who have been arrested on trumped-up charges for refusing to be conscripte­d into the SDF.

IS militants once held vast parts of Syria and Iraq but lost most ground after a long military altercatio­n with Kurdish forces from both countries, who were backed by the United States and other powers.

The prison attack is their largest operation in the country since 2019.

Growing resentment

The US-based rights group Human Rights Watch says some 12,000 men and boys, including as many as 4,000 foreigners from almost 50 countries, are being held by the SDF in several detention centers. Civic groups have accused the SDF of employing torture at some, allegation­s denied by Kurdish authoritie­s.

The detentions, often in what rights groups call inhumane conditions and sometimes without charges or trial, have led to resentment on the part of Arabs living in the Kurdish-controlled part of Syria, who say they are suffering from racial discrimina­tion.

Local Arab elders say support for IS in their communitie­s has grown as a result of the perceived mistreatme­nt.

tj/rs (AP, AFP)

 ?? ?? Numerous items were taken from captured IS fighters
Numerous items were taken from captured IS fighters
 ?? ?? Kurdish security forces have deployed throughout al-Hasaka as fighting continues
Kurdish security forces have deployed throughout al-Hasaka as fighting continues

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