Bangkok Post

IS inmates take control of prison after riot

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AMMAN: Islamic State (IS) prisoners on Sunday seized control of the ground floor of a major prison in northeaste­rn Syria run by the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), with some of the militants managing to escape, an SDF spokesman said.

The SDF, which is spearheade­d by the Kurdish YPG militia, mounted an operation to capture those who fled as security forces sent reinforcem­ents to crush the mutiny in Hasaka prison, spokesman Mustafa Bali said in a tweet.

“The situation is tense inside the prison currently and we sent anti-terror forces and additional troops to control the situation,” Mr Bali said.

Earlier, Syrian state television said 12 militants had fled from the prison towards the southern outskirts of Hasaka. A US-led coalition spokesman confirmed a riot had taken place, adding the facility held only low-level IS members.

“The coalition is assisting our Syrian Democratic Forces partners with aerial surveillan­ce as they quell an uprising at Hasakah detention facility,” US-led coalition spokesman Col Myles B Caggins III said in a tweet.

Arab tribal figures in touch with residents in the area said US coalition planes were seen flying overhead in the vicinity of the prison following the incident.

There were unconfirme­d reports that several inmates had been killed in the uprising, the latest of several recent attempts to flee from SDF prisons, according to residents.

It was not clear how many inmates were in the prison, one of several where the SDF has kept thousands of detainees, many of whose relatives say are young children and others arrested on flimsy charges or for disobeying the SDF’s policy of forcible conscripti­on.

US-based Human Rights Watch said the SDF holds about 12,000 men and boys suspected of IS affiliatio­n, including 2,000 to 4,000 foreigners from almost 50 countries.

The inmates are held in overcrowde­d prisons where conditions are inhumane in many cases, according to Human Rights Watch and other rights groups.

The Kurdish-led forces also hold about 100,000 Syrian and foreign women and children who are family members of militant suspects in squalid camps across the areas they control.

Some Arabs, who form a majority of the inhabitant­s of the areas under the control of Syrian Kurdish YPG militia, accuse the Kurds of discrimina­tion, an allegation rejected by Kurdish officials.

With crucial US air and ground support, the SDF defeated jihadists across north and east Syria. The IS has resorted to guerrilla attacks since losing its last significan­t piece of territory in Syria last year.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Prisoners suspected of being part of the Islamic State lie inside a prison cell in Hasaka, Syria in January.
REUTERS Prisoners suspected of being part of the Islamic State lie inside a prison cell in Hasaka, Syria in January.

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