Arab News

Kurd-led forces capture villages from Daesh near Raqqa

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BEIRUT: Several villages held by Daesh have been captured by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a coalition of militias backed by the United States that includes a strong Kurdish contingent, an organizati­on that monitors the war said on Monday.

The advance is part of a military campaign backed by an internatio­nal coalition led by the United States to drive Daesh from its Syrian capital of Raqqa. It follows SDF gains against the radical group across the north of the country.

The strongest group in the SDF is the People’s Protection Units or YPG, a Kurdish militia, but Washington has said that any operation to retake Raqqa should be predominan­tly Arab, the ethnicity of most of the city’s residents.

The latest advances in the countrysid­e about 50 km west and northwest of Raqqa follow an earlier phase of SDF gains on another front about 30 km north of the city.

Three SDF soldiers were killed fighting Daesh after the capture of five villages, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a Britain-based war monitor, said on Monday.

Daesh had been on the back foot in both Syria and Iraq, where it is under attack in Mosul, its biggest and most important possession, and after a string of US airstrikes that have killed many of its leaders this year.

However, earlier this month it launched a surprise attack 160 km southwest of Raqqa to retake the ancient desert city of Palmyra, which it had lost in March to Syrian regime forces backed by Russian air power after a nine-month occupation.

That attack demonstrat­ed the risks still posed by the group across Syria even after its territoria­l losses there since mid-2015, including holdings along the Turkish border which were once its main route for supplies and recruits. Complicati­ng the efforts against Daesh is a second campaign being waged against it in northwest Syria by Turkey and Syrian opposition groups allied to Ankara. This has taken a large area from the radical group but is also aimed at stopping Kurdish expansion.

The Turkish-backed Syrian fighters are now attempting to capture the city of Al-Bab from Daesh, a move that will end Kurdish hopes of uniting their two separated areas of self-rule in northern Syria.

The Turkish military said one of its soldiers had been killed in a car bomb in Al-Bab on Sunday and that 11 militants were also killed in clashes that day.

Meanwhile, mobile phones, cartons of cigarettes and fresh mutton are all on sale inside a camp for Iraqi civilians displaced in the battle to recapture Mosul — if they have the money.

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