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Hundreds lumber out of last Daesh redoubt in east Syria

By AFP - Mar 14,2019 - Last updated at Mar 14,2019

A member of the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces helps an elderly man said by the SDF to be a member of Daesh as he exits with others from the village of Baghouz in the eastern Syrian province of Deir Ezzor on Thursday (AFP photo)

BAGHOUZ, Syria —Hundreds of men, women and children trudged out of a remote eastern Syrian village Thursday where the Daesh group has been making a suicidal last stand against advancing US-backed forces.

All that remains of a sprawling cross-border "caliphate" the extremists declared in 2014 is a battered riverside camp in the village of Baghouz near the Iraqi border.

The Syrian Democratic Forces, and warplanes of a US-led coalition backing them, have rained fire on the enclave since Sunday, blitzing thousands of Daesh members into surrender.

Hundreds more followed on Thursday, slowly walking up the orange cliff overlooking the smouldering Daesh encampment in a bend of the Euphrates River, an AFP reporter there said.

Under the drizzle, men with thick beards struggled on crutches, while women stumbled under the weight of bags stuffed full, one with a toothbrush poking out of a back pocket.

Children followed, covered in dust and hair in disarray. When they saw the journalists, some started crying.

Most of the men appeared to be wounded. One man had an eye patch, another his arm in a sling. 

Many, including the children, appeared to be foreigners. A black man held up his hands to hide his face.

SDF spokesman Mustefa Bali said they were leaving after an "intensive offensive" on their last scrap of land by the Euphrates the night before.

"A large number of ISIS [Daesh] fighters and their families started to surrender to the #SDF since this morning," he said in English on Twitter.

Hardliners inside the pocket have been hiding underground from air strikes by a US-led coalition, and unleashing suicide bombers on advancing forces.

 

'Uninhabitable' camps 

 

A spokesman for the Kurdish units inside the village of Baghouz earlier Thursday said this was slowing progress.

“Those who stayed inside are mostly suicide bombers blowing themselves up, which is impeding the advance,” said Jiaker Amed, a spokesman for the Kurdish People’s Protection Units (YPG).

SDF spokesman Adnan Afrin said his forces had stopped eight suicide bombers from reaching their targets since Wednesday.

Thousands of Daesh family members, as well as suspected fighters, have poured out of the shrinking pocket in Baghouz in recent weeks.

Since the offensive resumed on Sunday, 3,000 Daesh members have surrendered, according to the SDF.

About 60,000 people have streamed out of Daesh-held territory since December, the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says, around a tenth of them suspected extremists.

The exodus has sparked a humanitarian crisis in Kurdish-held camps for the displaced, where women and children have arrived exhausted after weeks of siege.

These include the wives and children of alleged foreign extremists, hundreds of whom are being held by the Kurdish forces.

Save the Children said Thursday more than 3,500 foreign children from more than 30 countries were estimated to be living in camps in northeast Syria.

Of these, over 2,000 are younger than five, it said.

The UN humanitarian coordination office OCHA says new arrivals are in a worse state than in previous weeks, but there is hardly space for them at the main camp.

“The conditions within Al Hol camp are over-crowded, uninhabitable and threaten human dignity and life, with people forced to sleep on the ground during... rain and low temperatures,” it said.

The International Rescue Committee says 120 people — mainly young children — have died on their way or after arrival.

At the height of its rule, Daesh implemented its brutal interpretation of Islam on millions in territory the size of the United Kingdom across Syria and Iraq.

It churned out violent propaganda to attract foreign recruits.

Syria’s Kurds have repeatedly called for foreign government to repatriate the Daesh suspects they hold, but they have mostly been reluctant.

Since starting with the brutal repression of protests against President Bashar Assad, Syria’s civil war has killed more than 360,000 and displaced millions.

A conference in Brussels this week seeks to help donors drum up $9 billion to help Syrians uprooted by the war.

Assad’s forces control almost two-thirds of the country.

But the northwestern bastion of Idlib held by Syria’s former Al Qaeda affiliate, as well as a large swathe of the oil-rich northeast controlled by the SDF, remain beyond his reach.

Air strikes by regime ally Russia killed 17 civilians in Idlib on Wednesday, according to the observatory, which relies on sources inside Syria for its information.

It said they were the first such raids on the region since a Russian-Turkish buffer zone deal in September aimed to protect it from a massive regime assault.

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