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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

Forces to pluck more civilians from last IS pocket in Syria

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Omar Oil Field, Syria: US-backed fighters said on Saturday they are keeping a corridor open to rescue remaining civilians from the IS group’s last speck of territory in Syria, as the UN appealed for urgent assistance. The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces have evacuated nearly 5,000 men, women and children from the extremist holdout since Wednesday, bringing the SDF closer to retaking the less than half a square kilometre still under IS control. “On our side, the corridor is open and we hope a larger number of civilians will arrive but that depends on IS fighters and whether they will give civilians a chance to exit,” SDF spokesman Adnan Afrin said at their Al Omar base.


He said the SDF had evacuated “more than 2,000 people, including women, children and men” on Friday, mostly wives and children of IS fighters. Nearly 2,500 people arrived the same day at a Kurdish-run camp for the displaced further north, compounding dire conditions inside the already crammed settlement, the UN’s humanitarian coordination office OCHA said. It warned of the “huge challenges” posed by the influx. More than four years after IS overran large parts of Syria and neighbouring Iraq and declared a “caliphate”, they have lost all but a tiny patch in the village of Baghouz near the Iraqi border. Some 2,000 people are believed to remain inside Baghouz, according to the SDF.


The force says it is trying to evacuate remaining civilians through a corridor before pressing on with a battle to crush the extremists unless holdout fighters surrender. The SDF transferred the fresh batch of evacuees to a screening point outside Baghouz on Friday, to weed out potential extremists. An AFP corespondent saw hundreds of women and children spread out on the arid desert ground, surrounded by bags, begging for food and water.


A smaller group of men were separated from the women as SDF fighters searched the latest arrivals and checked their identification cards. An Iraqi woman in her forties wearing a face veil held in her hand a medical report in English.


She said the report was written for her by a doctor inside the Baghouz pocket, explaining that she needed treatment for kidney problems. Syrian woman Khadija Ali Mohammad, the 24-year-old wife of a deceased IS fighter, said conditions inside the IS pocket were deplorable. “We were living in tents and eating bread made from bran. My three sisters and I didn’t have enough money to pay smugglers to get us out before, and our husbands had died in battle,” the woman from Aleppo’s countryside in northern Syria said. Around 44,000 people — mostly civilians — have streamed out of IS’s shrinking territory since early December, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights. — AFP


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