ISIS retakes Raqqa district from Syrian Democratic Forces: monitor

A member of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) crosses a street on June 27, 2017 in the suburb of Dariya on the western city limits of Raqqa after the area was seized by SDF from the ISIS.


:: ISIS militants recaptured an eastern district of their Syrian bastion Raqqa on Friday, a monitor said, rolling back the advance of US-backed fighters.

“ISIS fully retook al-Senaa, which was the most important neighborhood taken by the Syrian Democratic Forces,” said Rami Abdel Rahman, who heads the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

“IS fighters attacked the SDF with suicide bombers and (weaponized) drones, and also used tunnels,” he told AFP.

The densely built-up neighborhood was the closest that the SDF and allied Arab fighters known as the Elite Forces had come to the city center.

On Thursday, dozens of militants disguised in SDF uniforms launched an attack on al-Senaa from the city center, carrying out three suicide car bomb attacks and overrunning six SDF positions.

By Friday, the SDF and its allies withdrew from al-Senaa to the adjacent neighborhood of al-Meshleb.

“They are now reinforcing their defensive positions in al-Meshleb,” Abdel Rahman said.

An ISis statement published on social media early Friday said its fighters had been locked in “hours-long” clashes with the SDF in al-Senaa and al-Meshleb.

The SDF broke into Raqqa on June 6 after spending months chipping away at the militants’ territory around the city.

With the loss of al-Senaa, the SDF is left in control of al-Meshleb and two districts in the west of the city.

On Thursday, the SDF cut off the last escape route for ISIS from Raqqa, trapping the besieged militants inside their de facto Syrian capital.

Around 2,500 militants are fighting inside Raqqa, according to British Major General Rupert Jones, a deputy commander of the US-led coalition backing the SDF.

The United Nations estimates some 100,000 civilians remain in the city, with the militants accused of using them as human shields.

Raqqa became infamous as the scene of some of the worst ISIS atrocities, including public beheadings, and is thought to have been a hub for planning attacks overseas.

A Syrian Democratic Forces fighter sit as medics treat his comrades injured by sniper fired by ISIS militants in a field hospital in Raqqa, Syria June 28, 2017.













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