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Syria US-backed fighters enter Daesh-held airport — spokesman

By AFP - Mar 26,2017 - Last updated at Mar 26,2017

A Syrian child looks on as she is being carried by her mother at a temporary refugee camp in the village of Ain Issa, housing people who fled Daesh group’s Syrian stronghold Raqqa, some 50 kilometres north of the group’s de facto capital, on Saturday (AFP photo)

BEIRUT — Fighters from the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a US-backed Kurdish-Arab alliance on Sunday entered a military airport held by the Daesh radical group in northern Syria, a spokesman said.

The advance on Tabaqa airbase comes as the alliance prepares an attack on Daesh’s de facto Syrian capital Raqqa, seeking to effectively surround the city before launching its assault.

SDF forces are also battling for the nearby Tabaqa Dam, held by Daesh, which was forced out of service on Sunday after its power station was damaged, a technical source there told AFP.

SDF spokesman Talal Sello said clashes were ongoing at Tabaqa airbase, which Daesh captured in 2014.

"The SDF has taken control of more than 50 per cent of Tabaqa military airport. Fighting is ongoing inside the airport and its surroundings and full control of the airport is expected within the next few hours," he said.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor said Daesh forces had withdrawn from the air base under heavy artillery fire and US-led coalition air strikes.

Daesh seized the base from government troops in August 2014 and carried out one of its worst massacres there, killing up to 200 government soldiers.

With support from the US-led coalition fighting Daesh in Syria and Iraq, SDF fighters have inched closer to Raqqa, taking territory to the north and east.

At their closest point, they are just eight kilometres from the city, to the northeast.

But they are mostly further away, between 18 and 29 kilometres from Raqqa.

Earlier this week, US forces airlifted SDF fighters behind Daesh lines to allow them to launch the Tabaqa assault, and on Friday the alliance reached one of the dam’s entrances.

 

Tabaqa dam faces danger 

 

But the fight for the dam, the biggest in Syria, forced it out of service on Sunday, risking dangerous rising water levels.

“Shelling on the area... that supplies that dam with electricity has put it out of service,” the technical source said.

“The work needed to fix the problem is not possible because there is not sufficient staff available as a result of the intensive shelling in the area of the dam,” he added.

“If the problem is not fixed, it will begin to pose a danger to the dam.”

 The SDF’s Sello told AFP there was no imminent danger to the dam, adding it had not been hit in air strikes.

The dam remains under Daesh control, with SDF progress being hampered by the exposed nature of the terrain, which is also heavily mined, the Observatory said.

Daesh issued warnings through its propaganda agency Amaq that the dam “is threatened with collapse at any moment because of American strikes and a large rise in water levels”.

But the source at the dam told AFP there had not yet been significant water level increases, though he acknowledged levels would rise if the facility remained out of service.

Earlier this year, the UN’s humanitarian coordination agency OCHA said water levels in the Euphrates had risen 10 metres  since late January, in part from heavy rainfall and snow.

But it warned that damage to the dam “could lead to massive scale flooding across Raqqa and as far away as Deir Ezzor” province to the southeast.

Any further rises in the water level or damage to the Tabaqa dam “would have catastrophic humanitarian implications in all areas downstream”, the UN warned. 

 

More than 320,000 people have been killed in Syria since its conflict began in March 2011 with anti-government protests.

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