Arab Times

Fierce clashes as US-backed force battles DAESH in Raqqa

Next round of Syria talks in Astana delayed

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QAMISHLI, Syria, June 8, (Agencies): US-backed fighters battled the Islamic State group Thursday as they tried to push further into the jihadists’ Syrian bastion Raqqa, two days after finally entering the northern city.

The Syrian Democratic Forces alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters began the battle for the city earlier this week after seven months of fighting to surround the jihadist stronghold.

On Wednesday, an AFP journalist entered the city with SDF fighters and witnessed heavy clashes in the Al-Meshleb neighbourh­ood, with IS firing multiple mortar rounds towards the advancing forces.

He said part of the neighbourh­ood was under SDF control but US-led coalition planes were still carrying out strikes against IS fighters elsewhere in the district, one of the largest in Raqa.

SDF fighters were armed mostly with light weapons including Kalashniko­vs, and were also returning mortar fire on IS positions.

The SDF did not allow journalist­s to return to the city on Thursday where fighting was continuing.

“Our troops are advancing in Al-Meshleb and control parts of it,” SDF spokesman Talal Sello told AFP.

“The internatio­nal coalition forces are working with use on the ground in the battle for Raqa in a highly effective manner,” he added.

The US-led coalition said it had carried out 22 strikes near Raqqa on Wednesday, hitting IS fighting positions and vehicles as well as a weapons cache and a training camp.

The Britain-based Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitor said the SDF now controlled around twothirds of Al-Meshleb and was some 400 metres (yards) from the neighbouri­ng Al-Senaa district.

Mines

“IS has snipers monitoring Al-Meshleb neighbourh­ood and has laid mines extensivel­y throughout it,” the Observator­y said.

The group said the district had been emptied of its civilian population before the SDF entered, and IS had dug defensive trenches and tunnels in the area in a bid to hold off attacking forces.

Fighting was also continuing on the western outskirts of the city, the monitor said, adding that US special forces were actively participat­ing in battles on several fronts.

Around 500 US military personnel, not all of them special forces, are believed to be participat­ing in the battle for Raqa. On Wednesday, an AFP correspond­ent saw coalition armoured vehicles parked among olive trees in the desert east of Raqqa, covered with camouflage fabric.

SDF male and female commanders, dressed in fatigues and sporting colourful printed scarves wrapped around their heads, pored over maps on tablet devices to pinpoint targets.

Captured by the jihadists in 2014, Raqa has become synonymous with IS atrocities including beheadings and public displays of bodies, and also emerged as a hub for planning attacks abroad.

An estimated 300,000 civilians were believed to have been living under IS rule in Raqqa, including 80,000 displaced from other parts of Syria.

But thousands have fled in recent months, and the UN humanitari­an office estimates about 160,000 people remain in the city.

An activist from the anti-IS Raqa is Being Slaughtere­d Silently group told AFP on Wednesday that conditions in the city were deteriorat­ing, describing continuous bombardmen­t and water and electricit­y outages.

Civilians who have escaped have described harrowing journeys and being targeted by IS fighters as they fled.

The Internatio­nal Rescue Committee said earlier this week it was “deeply concerned for the safety of civilians in Raqa,” noting a drop in the numbers fleeing the city in the past week.

That decrease could indicate IS intends to use remaining civilians “as human shields,” the aid group said.

Civilians trapped in Raqqa also face the risk of heavy coalition air strikes.

The number of reported civilian casualties in the coalition’s strikes has swelled as the SDF offensive has intensifie­d.

Along with Mosul in Iraq, Raqa was one of the twin pivots of the self-styled Islamic “caliphate” that IS declared nearly three years ago.

Iraqi forces backed by the coalition are battling IS in Mosul too. The jihadists there are now confined to a few neighbourh­oods in the Old City.

The Syrian military has so far been absent from the battle for Raqqa, though state news agency SANA said Thursday that the air force had targeted IS positions in the west of Raqa province.

The Observator­y said the strikes were carried out by Syria’s ally Russia.

Elsewhere in Syria, there has been a sharp reduction in fighting in the past month after rebel supporter Turkey, Russia and fellow regime backer Iran brokered a deal to set up safe zones in four key battlegrou­nds.

The three sponsors had been due to meet with regime and rebel representa­tives in Astana next week to shore up the deal but the Kazakh foreign ministry said on Thursday that the talks had been postponed.

The sponsors are still arguing over the precise boundaries of the zones and which countries should send in forces to police them.

Meanwhile, Russian-backed peace talks on Syria in Astana have been pushed back, organisers said Thursday, as key players wrangle over the future of fragile safe zones in the wartorn country.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A member of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), made up of an alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters, guards a position in the Al-Meshlen neighbourh­ood of Raqa as they try to advance further into the Islamic State (IS) group’s
Syrian bastion on Jun 7,...
(AFP) A member of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), made up of an alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters, guards a position in the Al-Meshlen neighbourh­ood of Raqa as they try to advance further into the Islamic State (IS) group’s Syrian bastion on Jun 7,...

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