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AFP
Omar Oil Field, Syria
US-backed forces were locked in fierce fighting Sunday as they pressed the battle against the last shred of the Islamic State group’s “caliphate” in eastern Syria.
The militants overran large parts of the country and neighbouring Iraq in 2014, but various military offensives have since reduced that territory to a patch on the Iraqi border.
The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), supported by a US-led coalition, announced a final push to retake the militant pocket late Saturday, after a pause of more than a week to allow civilians to flee.
SDF spokesman Mustafa Bali on Sunday afternoon said his fighters had battled their way forwards against the militants, capturing 41 positions from them. “Our forces are relying on direct combat with light weapons,” he said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor group said the SDF had advanced across farming land, backed by coalition air strikes and artillery fire.
Earlier, an SDF field commander reported “heavy clashes” as his fighters gained ground.
The SDF launched an offensive to expel IS from the oil-rich eastern province of Deir Ezzor in September.
The Kurdish-led alliance has since whittled down militant-held territory to a scrap of just four square kilometres (one square mile) between the Euphrates and the Iraqi border.
Up to 600 militants could still remain inside, most of them foreigners, Bali said.
Hundreds of civilians are also believed to be inside, he said. But Bali added the extremist group’s elusive leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was likely not in the last pocket.
“We do not think he is in Syria,” Bali said, without adding further details about the whereabouts of the man who declared a cross-border IS “caliphate” in 2014.
On the Iraqi side of the border, French members of the coalition on Saturday stood ready to pour fury on any militants trying to escape.
Dozens of 155-mm shells were lined up ready to be loaded onto three green-and-black Caesar gun-howitzers with a range of 40 kilometres (25 miles).
Coalition deputy commander Christopher Ghika last week said Iraqi forces had sealed their border with Syria.
Since September, more than 1,270 IS militants, more than 670 SDF fighters, and around 400 civilians have been killed in the fighting, the Observatory says.
At the height of their rule, the militnats imposed their brutal interpretation of Islamic law on a territory roughly the size of Britain.
But military offensives in both countries, including by the SDF, have since retaken the vast bulk of that “caliphate”. On Saturday, Bali said he expected the battle for the last patch of IS territory to be over in days.
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11/02/2019
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