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Syria force defends hard-won Raqqa gains from Daesh fightback

By AFP - Sep 04,2017 - Last updated at Sep 04,2017

A female member of the Syrian Democratic Forces, a US backed Kurdish-Arab alliance, holds a position inside a building in an area close to the Old City in the embattled northern Syrian city of Raqqa on Sunday, as they battle to retake the city from the Daesh group (AFP photo)

Raqqa, Syria — Fighters from a US-backed coalition battling the Daesh terror group in Syria walk among heavily damaged buildings in Raqqa's Old City as snipers on upper floors monitor nearby extremist positions.

The smell of decay rises from bodies of Daesh fighters killed in the battle for the key district as Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) field commander Ardlan Hasake patrols in an armoured Humvee.

"We pushed Daesh out of the whole of Raqqa's Old City. It was their strategic centre and their main base for foreign fighters," he says, using an Arabic acronym for IS.

"All their forces were here and they tried repeatedly to attack us in large numbers to retake it, but our comrades repelled their attacks." 

The SDF announced on Friday that it had taken full control of Raqqa's Old City after fierce clashes with the extremists seeking to defend what remains of their one-time Syrian bastion.

The Kurdish-Arab alliance, backed by an international coalition fighting Daesh in Syria and neighbouring Iraq, has seized more than half of the city since they first entered it in June.

In a nearby building, commanders lounge on the floor. One holds a tablet computer which he uses to map the positions of Daesh fighters in a street just south of the Old City wall.

An SDF unit then moves to the front line to strike the extremists.

Snipers have installed firing points in the upper floors of buildings overlooking other parts of the city.

One of them sets up a rifle he nicknames "Zagros", after a mountain range that is home to many of the world's Kurds.

He trains his sights on a Daesh fighter near a mobile phone tower on the edge of the Old City, and prepares to squeeze the trigger.

 

 'We pushed them back' 

 

A coalition air strike slams into a nearby street, sending clouds of grey smoke and dust billowing into the air.

"We're combing the streets around the Old City," Kurdish SDF commander Arkish Siyamand tells AFP.

"Daesh attacked some of our positions today [Sunday] but we pushed them back and the coalition bombed them."

 Seizing the Old City has put the SDF in a position dominating the city centre, which includes key Daesh security bases and some of Raqqa's most densely packed neighbourhoods.

Siyamand says the extremists are likely to try to retake the strategically vital Old City.

The SDF entered the Old City after coalition air strikes punched two holes in its Abbasid-era walls.

Parts of the wall have also been damaged, apparently by clashes.

Cars riddled with bullet holes sit at the entrances to side streets, evidence of intense combat.

In other parts of the Old City, SDF fighters have hung pink and brown curtains across major streets to allow them to move freely by blocking Daesh snipers' lines of sight.

The SDF's next target is a series of large grain silos around a kilometre south of the Old City.

Female snipers from the Kurdish Women's Protection Units sit on an upper floor of a building, monitoring Daesh fighters moving around the silos.

Biritan Judi, in her 20s, hovers a finger over the trigger of her rifle which protrudes from a window, the barrel resting on a decorated pillow.

"We monitor Daesh fighters and shoot them if they try to advance," she says.

 

"We're deployed in this strategic position and waiting for our prey from Daesh so we can smash their heads."

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