Arab News

Collapse of the ‘caliphate’: Daesh territory slashed by 99.5 percent

- Arab News Jeddah

The Daesh “caliphate” that was once the size of Britain has been reduced to a tiny patch of land near a village in eastern Syria, the anti-Daesh coalition said on Thursday.

Gains by Kurdish-led forces in Syria have shrunk Daesh territory by “approximat­ely 99.5 percent,” said coalition deputy commander Major General Christophe­r Ghika.

The militants are now clinging on to a small sliver of territory near the village of Baghouz, and many are fleeing or surrenderi­ng before a final offensive. Iraqi militias from the Popular Mobilizati­on Forces launched 50 missiles on Thursday at targets in Baghouz.

Militants were “trying to escape through intermixin­g with the innocent women and children attempting to flee the fighting,” Gen. Ghika told a coalition ministeria­l meeting in Washington. “These tactics won’t succeed. Our Syrian partners are focused on finding Daesh wherever they hide, and our Iraqi partners have secured their borders.”

Saudi Arabia’s Minister of State for Foreign Affairs, Adel Al-Jubeir, led the Saudi delegation at the meeting. The Kingdom “will continue its fight against terrorism and its sponsoring countries, and pledge to support all internatio­nal and regional efforts to eliminate terrorist organizati­ons, terrorism and the activities of destabiliz­ing states in the region,” AlJubeir said.

More than 37,000 people, mostly wives and children of militants, have fled Daesh territory since the coalition’s Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) intensifie­d its offensive in December. The figure is thought to include more than 3,000 Daesh fighters.

As the “caliphate” collapses, detention centers and camps in northeast Syria are filling up with fighters who have surrendere­d or been captured, along with their families.

Tens of thousands of foreigners are estimated to have joined Daesh since 2014, and the SDF said they were detaining foreign fighters every day. They are also holding hundreds of women, and children of Daesh fighters, in two camps in the north.

The Kurdish administra­tion in northeaste­rn Syria has urged the foreigners’ countries of origin to take them back, but they are often reluctant.

France has suggested it may take 50 adults and 80 children who are French citizens, but rights groups are concerned about the process.

Human Rights Watch said it wanted clarity on the exact numbers, what route would be used, and whether children would be separated from their parents.

 ??  ?? The death toll from the collapse of an Istanbul apartment block rose to 10 on Thursday as more bodies were pulled from the rubble. The eight-story building collapsed on Wednesday but the cause is not yet clear. Thirteen people were injured, three of them seriously.
The death toll from the collapse of an Istanbul apartment block rose to 10 on Thursday as more bodies were pulled from the rubble. The eight-story building collapsed on Wednesday but the cause is not yet clear. Thirteen people were injured, three of them seriously.

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