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Syria force evacuates 'human shields' in push to crush Daesh

More than 800 surrendering extremists, family members exit Baghouz Monday

By AFP - Mar 04,2019 - Last updated at Mar 04,2019

Smoke billows after shelling on the Daesh group's last holdout of Baghouz, in the eastern Syrian Deir Ezzor province, on Saturday (AFP photo)

BAGHOUZ, Syria — Kurdish-led forces supported by air strikes from an international coalition evacuated civilians held as "human shields" Monday after smashing their way into the extremists’ last scrap of territory in eastern Syria.

The Syrian Democratic Forces and its allies from the US-led coalition unleashed a deluge of fire on the village of Baghouz at the weekend to break the defences of Daesh group fighters in the final sliver of their "caliphate".

But the Kurdish-led force said their offensive had been slowed down Monday due to remaining civilians inside the pocket, and an SDF spokeswoman said hundreds had been evacuated out of the crumbling bastion in the past 48 hours.

"More than 800 people exited Baghouz from yesterday until today – IS [Daesh] family members and fighters who surrendered," she said.

Through binoculars from an SDF position outside the extremist holdout, an AFP correspondent saw men kneeling on the ground before boarding trucks, as well as women clad in black and children.

The push on Daesh’s last pocket of territory had resumed Friday after days of mass evacuations, but SDF spokesman Mustefa Bali said Monday the operation was being hampered by the presence of more civilians in the besieged enclave.

"We're slowing down the offensive in Baghouz due to a small number of civilians held as human shields," he said.

Three air strikes hit the village of Baghouz earlier in the day, causing a huge cloud of smoke to billow up into the sky.

 

Suicide attacks 

 

Despite being hugely outnumbered, jihadists making a desperate last stand in the riverside hamlet — most of them foreigners according to the SDF — are putting up stiff resistance.

They are using snipers, a network of tunnels, and suicide bombers to fight back.

On Sunday, eight suicide attackers blew themselves up before reaching SDF positions and three car bombs were detonated at a distance, the Kurdish-led forces said.

SDF officers perched on rooftops have been receiving information on IS positions from elite units, and passing them on to the coalition to call in air strikes.

Daesh has lost several of its positions in such strikes since Friday in Baghouz, a village nestled in a palm-lined bend of the Euphrates River.

Seven SDF members and 18 militants have been killed in the fighting since the final push started, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says.

The capture of Baghouz would mark the end of Daesh territorial control in the region and deal a death blow to the “caliphate” proclaimed in 2014, which once covered huge swathes of Syria and Iraq.

At its peak more than four years ago, the proto-state created by Daesh was the size of the United Kingdom and administered millions of people.

It minted its own currency, levied taxes, and designed its own school curricula.

The “caliphate” effectively collapsed in 2017 when Daesh lost most of its major cities in both countries.

The loss of Baghouz, which the SDF says is only days away, would carry mostly symbolic value.

 

‘No indoors to go to’ 

 

The latest military operation has, nonetheless, sparked a major humanitarian emergency, with thousands of people emerging from the ruins of the “caliphate” and washing up in Kurdish-run camps.

After months under heavy bombardment and sometimes with very little to eat, families emerging from Baghouz are often in poor physical and psychological health.

The foreigners among them are not wanted in their countries of origin, and locals are filling camps that the Kurdish administration in the region says it needs more international help to run.

The International Committee of the Red Cross on Monday said tens of thousands of Syrians at the camps needed immediate aid, with several sleeping rough in the cold.

“The nights are biting. More than two dozen children are reported to have died due to the cold in recent weeks,” said Philip Spoerri, head of the ICRC’s delegation in Syria.

“People are bundled in clothes, as they have no indoors to go to. Some don’t even have tents yet and remain exposed to rain, wind and bitter temperatures,” he said.

The US and Russian military chiefs were to meet on Monday to discuss operations in Syria.

The United States is to keep a residual force in Syria after any declared victory against Daesh.

Almost eight years into a civil war that has killed more than 360,000 people and displaced millions, the Russia-backed Damascus regime is back in control of nearly two-thirds of the country.

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