SDF carries out last evacuation from IS Syria holdout
The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) has slowed down its offensive on the final pocket due to the presence of civilians, with just a scrap of the IS "caliphate" remaining from a territory that once spanned Syria and Iraq.
An AFP correspondent saw at least 46 trucks crammed with men, women and children approaching an SDF outpost, 20 kilometres north of the IS bastion.
One vehicle was packed with women clad in black and men who covered their faces. Wounded people were also among the latest evacuees.
Some IS fighters and civilians, mostly relatives of jihadists, are trapped inside less than half a square kilometre in the village of Baghouz near the Iraqi border.
The Kurdish-led SDF evacuated nearly 5,000 men, women and children from the area on Wednesday and Friday, but none over the weekend.
Earlier on Monday, SDF spokesman Mustefa Bali, said thousands remained inside the IS pocket.
The Syrian Democratic Forces has slowed down its offensive on the final pocket due to the presence of civilians, with just a scrap of the IS "caliphate" remaining from a territory that once spanned Syria and Iraq |
"According to what we heard from those who have left, there are nearly 5,000 people still inside," Bali told AFP.
At the SDF screening point outside the village, SDF fighters expressed hopes Monday's arrivals would be the last.
"We want it to be over," one of them, 29-year-old Mazloum, told AFP.
"Every day we say today is the day but we hope it will all end today and not tomorrow," he said.
'Secret' transfers
Kurdish foreign affairs official Abdel Karim Omar said the SDF would announce the end of the IS proto-state "in the next few days".
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"But this does not mean that we have eliminated terrorism, which must be eradicated at the roots," he said.
Beyond Baghouz, IS still has thousands of fighters and sleeper cells across several countries.
In Syria, it retains a presence in the vast Badia desert, and the jihadists have claimed deadly attacks in SDF-held territory.
Thousands of suspected IS fighters have attempted to blend in with civilians fleeing the crumbling "caliphate".
According to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, around 46,000 people, including thousands of jihadists, have streamed out of the Baghouz pocket since early December.
The SDF screens those exiting at an outpost outside the village to weed out potential IS fighters.
After being vetted, women, children, and men not suspected of belonging to the extremist group are transported north to the Kurdish-run camp of al-Hol, while suspected jihadists are sent to SDF-held detention centres.
The Observatory on Monday said 1,400 people, mainly IS relatives, were secretly transported from orchards on the outskirts of Baghouz to neighbouring Iraq during the past 24 hours.
Kurdish foreign affairs official did not confirm the transfer, but denied the SDF was responsible.
"In principle, we do not hand over any person passing through our territories to Iraqi authorities or any other party," Omar said.
Such transfers can only happen if they were trucked from Baghouz "by another party", he explained, without specifying.
The mass outpouring of men, women and children from the IS foothold has overwhelmed the Kurdish-run Al-Hol camp, six hours north of Baghouz |
Baghdad on Sunday said the SDF have transferred 280 Iraqi nationals accused of fighting alongside IS to Iraqi authorities.
Fourteen suspected French jihadists were among those transferred, an Iraqi government source told AFP on Monday.
Iraq's President Barham Saleh said on Monday that Iraqi courts would prosecute 13 suspected French IS fighters, who were turned over to Iraq after being captured by the SDF.
"Those who have engaged in crimes against Iraq and Iraqi installations and personnel, we are definitely seeking them and seeking their trial in Iraqi courts," he told a news conference in Paris.
International community 'not taking responsibility'
The mass outpouring of men, women and children from the IS foothold has overwhelmed the Kurdish-run Al-Hol camp, six hours north of Baghouz.
"The international community is not currently taking responsibility towards the large number of people leaving the last IS pocket, especially children," Omar said.
The International Rescue Committee said Friday that new arrivals had pushed the camp's population to over 45,000, exacerbating already dire conditions at the crammed facility.
At least 78 people, mostly children, have died on the way to the camp or shortly after arriving in recent weeks, the IRC said.
A warehouse fire on Friday caused by a gas cylinder explosion "destroyed 200 family tents" and five larger ones and injured 16 workers, it said.
The UN's humanitarian coordination office OCHA on Friday warned the camp was struggling to keep up with the flood of evacuees.
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