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EDITOR IN CHIEF- ABDULLAH BIN SALIM AL SHUEILI

IS loses emblematic stronghold of Raqa

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US-backed forces took full control of Raqa from the IS group on Tuesday, defeating the last militant holdouts in the de facto Syrian capital of their now-shattered “caliphate”.


The victory caps a battle of more than four months for Raqa, and hammers another nail in the coffin of the group’s experiment in statehood, which has collapsed in the face of offensives in Syria and Iraq.


Inside Raqa, joyous fighters from the Kurdish-Arab Syrian Democratic Forces celebrated and raised their yellow flag in the city’s Al Naim traffic circle, which became known as “Hell Roundabout” after it was used for gruesome public executions.


“Hell Roundabout is now Al Naim Roundabout again,” the fighters cheered, surrounded by crushed buildings and charred cars damaged in the ferocious battle for the city.


The SDF broke into Raqa in June, after months of fighting to surround the city, and on Tuesday flushed the last few hundred IS fighters from their remaining positions in the main hospital and the municipal stadium.


“Everything is finished in Raqa, our forces have taken full control of Raqa,” the alliance’s spokesman Talal Sello said.


He said the SDF was combing the city for any remaining militants who had not surrendered or been killed.


“The military operations in Raqa have finished, but there are clearing operations now under way to uncover any sleeper cells there might be and remove mines,” he said.


The announcement came just days after the SDF said it was launching the final phase of its operation to retake the city. There had been fears that the force, backed by the US-led coalition battling IS in Syria and Iraq, could get bogged down in a protracted battle for the last 10 per cent of the city where the militants had prepared for a final stand.


But on Tuesday they captured the hospital and stadium in quick succession, effectively ending IS’s more than three-year presence in the city. Sello said an official statement announcing “the liberation of the city” would be made soon.


The breakthrough in the operation, which was launched on June 6, came after a deal was struck allowing the evacuation in recent days of civilians who had been held as human shields.


Under the deal, a total of 275 Syrian IS fighters and relatives also surrendered to the SDF, though it was unclear whether they would be given safe passage elsewhere.


The battle for the city was fierce, with the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitor saying on Tuesday more than 1,000 civilians had been killed in the fighting.


The Britain-based group put the overall death toll for the battle at 3,250, with 1,130 civilians among them, but said hundreds more were still missing.


Tens of thousands of civilians fled the fighting, some leaving ahead of the SDF’s arrival, and others escaping towards the militia as they advanced in the city.


For Umm Abdullah, a Raqa native who fled the city three years ago, news of its capture from IS was overwhelming.


“I can’t describe my happiness,” the 44-year-old said in the town of Kobane, 100 km north of Raqa.


“When my sister told me it had been freed, she started to cry, and then I started to cry. Thank God, thank God.”


After IS captured Raqa in 2014, the city become synonymous with the group’s worst abuses and was transformed into a planning centre for attacks abroad.


Its capture leaves the group with little more than a “dwarf territory” in neighbouring Deir Ezzor province, said Nicholas Heras, a fellow at the Centre for a New American Security think tank.


“IS will be mainly boxed into a strip of territory running along the Middle Euphrates River Valley in the province of Deir Ezzor,” he said.


“This will be the centre of gravity for IS in Syria.” — Reuters


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