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Syrian forces seize Daesh holdout in southern Syria — monitor

By AFP - Nov 17,2018 - Last updated at Nov 17,2018

Syrian army tank moves into position to siege Tallul Safa, the last extremist stronghold in the depth of the eastern Sweida Desert (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Allied forces with the Syrian regime on Saturday took back control of the Daesh group’s last holdout in southern Syria after months of fighting, a war monitor said.

Regime affiliated factions retook Tulul Al Safa, between the provinces of Damascus and Sweida, “after Daesh fighters withdrew from it and headed east into the Badia Desert”, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

The regime’s coalition of army and allied factions has been fighting the extremists in the area since a deadly July attack on the Druze minority in Sweida province.

In recent weeks, air strikes on the Tulul Al Safa pocket had increased and hundreds of regime fighters were sent as reinforcements, the observatory said.

The militants’ withdrawal was likely “under a deal with the regime forces” after weeks of encirclement and air raids, observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman said.

State news agency SANA reported regime forces had made “a great advance in Tulul Al Safa” and said they were combing the area for any remaining extremists.

In the July 25 attack, Daesh killed more than 250 people, most of them civilians, in a wave of suicide bombings, shootings and stabbings across Sweida province.

The extremists also kidnapped around 30 people — mostly women and children — during the deadliest assault on Syria’s Druze community in the seven-year civil war.

Twenty-three of the hostages have since returned home, while the remainder appear to have died or been executed by the militants.

The province is the heartland of the country’s Druze minority, which made up roughly 3 per cent of Syria’s pre-war population — or about 700,000 people.

Followers of a secretive offshoot of Islam, the Druze are considered heretics by the extremists of Daesh.

Daesh overran large swathes of Syria and neighboring Iraq in 2014, proclaiming a “caliphate” in land it controlled. 

But the militant group has since lost most of it to various offensives in both countries.

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