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Daesh imposes ‘Afghan dress’ in Syria’s Raqqa — monitor, activists
By AFP - Mar 06,2017 - Last updated at Mar 06,2017
Syrians return to their home after Al Bab town centre has been entirely freed from Daesh extremists as part of the operation ‘Euphrates Shield’, in Aleppo, Syria, on Monday (Anadolu agency photo)
BEIRUT — The Daesh terror group has imposed an “Afghan-style” dress code on men in its Syrian stronghold Raqqa to help its fighters blend into the civilian population, a monitor and activists said on Monday.
“For more than two weeks, Afghan-style clothing... has been imposed by Daesh,” said Abu Mohamed, an activist with the “Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently” group.
“Anyone who does not comply faces prison and a fine,” he told AFP.
The new restriction comes as a Kurdish-Arab alliance of fighters nears Raqqa, backed by the US-led coalition launching air strikes against Daesh.
The rule “is an attempt to make it harder for airplanes and the Kurdish forces... to distinguish between civilians and Daesh members,” Abu Mohamed said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor of the war, also reported the new rule in Raqqa.
“Daesh has imposed Afghan-style dress on residents of Raqqa so that informants giving coordinates to the US-led coalition will not be able to distinguish between civilians and fighters,” observatory director, Rami Abdel, Rahman told AFP.
Abu Mohamed said there was a “state of alert” in Raqqa, with new checkpoints springing up and Daesh arresting anyone who describes the situation as dire.
“Prices are skyrocketing and there is no electricity or water,” he told AFP.
The observatory also said civilians and the families of Daesh militants were attempting to flee into Raqqa province from neighbouring Aleppo, where Daesh is under assault in the east.
“Thousands of families in recent days have tried to reach the administrative borders of Raqqa province, along with around 120 families of militants and commanders of Daesh,” the monitor said.
The Kurdish-Arab Syrian Democratic Forces alliance advancing towards Raqqa on Monday cut a key supply route between the city and Daesh-held territory in Deir Ezzor province to the east.
The alliance is now eight kilometres from Raqqa to the northeast, according to the observatory.
It said Daesh was preventing civilians from entering the province “but granted families of its fighters” a document allowing “passage to Raqqa city by boat as ground transportation is now impossible because the bridges across the Euphrates have been destroyed”.
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