Hundreds taken by Daesh from displacement camp in east Syria: monitor

  • 10/14/2018
  • 00:00
  • 12
  • 0
  • 0
news-picture

The Daesh militia took “more than 100 families” during a raid in a displacement camp in east Syria A number of fighters of the Kurdish-led SDF died trying to defend the camp in a battle that lasted several hours BEIRUT: Hundreds of people were taken by Daesh fighters from a displacement camp in east Syria during a militant counterattack against advancing US-backed forces, a monitor said Saturday. The militants raided the camp on Friday, taking “more than 100 families” including relatives of Daesh defectors and of militants killed in fighting, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. A number of fighters of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) died trying to defend the camp in a battle that lasted several hours, the Britain-based monitoring group said. The US-backed SDF launched a major assault on September 10 on the small stretch of the Euphrates Valley around the town of Hajjin where they estimate some 3,000 jihadists are holed up. But they have sustained heavy casualties in the operation being conducted with US-led air support. Since Wednesday, 37 SDF fighters have been killed in militant counterattacks, the Observatory said. Daesh has lost 58 fighters, most of them in retaliatory coalition air strikes, it added. “IS is pressing its attacks in the Hajjin area as the SDF battles to hold them off with the support of the international coalition,” Observatory chief Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP. But a prolonged sandstorm has made it difficult for the coalition to carry out air strikes. Daesh published statements on its social media accounts describing a number of attacks by “soldiers of the caliphate” against SDF forces in the Hajjin area. The battle for Hajjin has claimed the lives of 176 SDF fighters and 325 Daesh militants since its launch last month, according to Observatory figures. The SDF, backed by the coalition, has ousted Daesh from swathes of northern and eastern Syria, including Raqqa, the de facto capital of the militants’ so-called caliphate. Founded in 2015, the SDF is spearheaded by the People’s Protection Units (YPG), a powerful Kurdish armed movement. Hundreds of foreigners have joined the YPG to battle Daesh, which has its own notorious contingent of foreign fighters.

مشاركة :