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Hundreds of Daesh fighters give up in east Syria

By Reuters - Mar 06,2019 - Last updated at Mar 06,2019

Civilians evacuated from the Daesh group's embattled holdout of Baghouz wait at a screening area held by the US-backed Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, in the eastern Syrian province of Deir Ezzor, on Tuesday (AFP photo)

NEAR BAGHOUZ, Syria — Hundreds of Daesh fighters surrendered on Wednesday and hundreds more of their jihadist comrades were caught trying to escape the hardline group's last, tiny scrap of land in eastern Syria, said a commander in the militia besieging it. 

Daesh fighters holed up in the enclave at Baghouz near the Iraqi border have been giving up in large numbers this week following a ferocious assault on their enclave on Saturday and Sunday, though it is unclear how many more remain inside. 

The US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) militia has slowed its attack to allow thousands of civilians to leave Baghouz, continuing an exodus that began when it announced it was launching a final battle for the enclave last month. 

Far more people were inside Baghouz than the SDF had expected, it said, and it wanted them all to leave before it either stormed the area or otherwise forced Daesh’s surrender there. 

The fall of Baghouz would mark the end of the rule of Daesh’s self-proclaimed "caliphate" over populated territory, although some fighters are still hiding out in remote desert or have gone underground to wage a guerrilla insurgency. 

A war monitor, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said there were preparations in eastern Syria to announce the end of Daesh there. Colonel Sean Ryan, spokesman for the US-led coalition backing the SDF, nevertheless, said the international force had "learned not to put any timetables on the last battle".

Syrian military air strikes against jihadists further west, in the country's central desert, were a reminder of the constant warnings by both Arab and Western officials that Daesh will continue to pose a serious security threat. 

After its sudden advance across swathes of Syria and Iraq in 2014, the group held about a third of both countries, but its wholesale slaughter or sexual enslavement of minorities and its grotesque public killings roused global anger. 

Separate offensives by different forces in both countries steadily drove it back, inflicting major defeats on it in 2017, and eventually forcing it back on Baghouz, a little cluster of hamlets and farmland on the Euphrates. 

 

Capture and surrender

 

Some 400 Daesh fighters were captured trying to escape Baghouz along with smugglers, the senior SDF commander said. Hundreds of others extremists surrendered, though it was not yet clear how many, the commander added. 

Those surrendering were among more than 2,000 people who left Baghouz on Wednesday in the latest evacuation, transported by trucks to a patch of desert where they are questioned, searched and given food and water. 

A group of fully veiled women being evacuated from Baghouz on Wednesday shouted “Allahu Akbar” [God is Greatest] as they gathered near a checkpoint where the SDF were searching them and one hit a journalist with a can of tuna. 

The SDF said about 6,500 people had left the area over the previous two days, including hundreds of men.

Among those who came out on Wednesday were 11 captive children from the Yazidi community. Daesh subjected the Yazidis to mass slaughter and enslavement in what the United Nations called a genocide, after overrunning the community’s heartland of Sinjar in Iraq in 2014. 

Four Shiite Muslim children abducted from the Iraqi city of Tel Afar four years ago were also freed and the SDF would try to reunite them with their parents said Mustafa Bali, a spokesman for the militia. 

Live television footage broadcast on Al Hadath television showed an area of desert where evacuees from Baghouz had gathered, with scores of children and black-veiled women sitting on the ground or hauling luggage as they trudged along.

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