Foreign IS fighters said leaving Raqqa under evacuation deal

Although Islamic State increasingly surrounded, US-led coalition says ‘difficult fighting’ ahead in campaign to oust terror group from city

This frame grab from a video provided on Friday, Oct. 13, 2017 by Turkey-based Kurdish Mezopotamya agency media outlet that is consistent with independent AP reporting, shows US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) fighters, stand around Syrian civilians who fled from the areas that still controlled by the Islamic State militants, in Raqqa, Syria. (Mezopotamya Agency, via AP)
This frame grab from a video provided on Friday, Oct. 13, 2017 by Turkey-based Kurdish Mezopotamya agency media outlet that is consistent with independent AP reporting, shows US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) fighters, stand around Syrian civilians who fled from the areas that still controlled by the Islamic State militants, in Raqqa, Syria. (Mezopotamya Agency, via AP)

Some foreign Islamic State terror group fighters have left the one-time jihadist bastion of Raqqa in Syria under a deal as the city’s capture looms, a local official said Sunday.

“A portion of the foreigners have left,” said Omar Alloush, a senior member of the Raqqa Civil Council, when asked about a deal announced Saturday for IS jihadists to evacuate Raqqa.

He could not confirm how many fighters had left the city on Saturday, or where they had gone.

“They took civilians as human shields and left,” he added.

The US-led coalition and local officials had said Syrian IS fighters would be allowed to evacuate the city alongside civilians under the deal, but excluded foreign fighters.

A Syrian woman talks to a fighter from the Syrian Democratic Forces as civilians gather on the western front after fleeing the center of Raqqa on October 12, 2017. (AFP Photo/Bulent Kilic)

The US-backed, Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces said the final battle for Raqqa was underway, apparently propelled by negotiation efforts that secured the surrender and evacuation of dozens of Syrian militants still holed up in the city.

In a statement, the US-led coalition said a convoy of vehicles was set to leave Raqqa following the deal brokered by a local council formed by their Kurdish allies and Arab tribal leaders.

The tribal leaders said they appealed to the coalition and the SDF to allow the evacuation of local Islamic State fighters to stem further violence.

“Because our aim is liberation not killing, we appealed to the SDF to arrange for the local fighters and secure their exit to outside of the city, with our guarantees,” the tribal leaders said in a statement.

It was not clear how many evacuees there were or where they would go, but the tribesmen said their evacuation would save the lives of civilians who the extremist fighters have used as human shields.

Last week, there was an estimated 4,000 civilians still in the city.

With the push to liberate the Arab-majority Raqqa led by Kurdish-dominated forces, local officials fear a backlash once the city falls. The initiative appeared to be an attempt by local leaders to stem such tension.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the talks were bogged down over the fate of the foreign fighters there, which according to a local Kurdish commander include French, Russian, Azeri, Indonesian and Turkish combatants.

The US-led coalition said it “was not involved in the discussions that led to the arrangement, but believes it will save innocent lives and allow Syrian Democratic Forces and the Coalition to focus on defeating Daesh terrorists in Raqqa with less risk of civilian casualties.” Daesh is an Arabic acronym for IS.

The evacuation deal places the US in a bind as it had earlier said that only surrender, not a negotiated withdrawal for IS fighters in Raqqa, would be accepted. The top US envoy for the anti-IS coalition, Brett McGurk, had previously stated that foreign fighters in Raqqa would die in the city.

A member of the Syrian Democratic Forces monitors the area on the western frontline in Raqqa on October 8, 2017. (AFP Photo/Bulent Kilic)

Omar Alloush, a senior member of the Raqqa Civil Council, said Friday around 100 militants had surrendered.

US Defense Secretary Jim Mattis told reporters travelling with him Friday that the US would accept the surrender of IS militants who would be interrogated for intelligence purposes.

“Right now, as the bottom drops out from underneath (IS), more and more of them are either surrendering — some are trying to surrender, and some amongst them — more fanatical ones aren’t allowing them to,” he said, using a different acronym for the extremist group.

Only weeks ago, the US coalition obstructed a Hezbollah-negotiated deal to evacuate IS fighters from its borders with Syria toward the border with Iraq. The coalition bombed the road used by the convoy evacuating the militants, only to finally capitulate following Russian calls asking it to allow Syrian troops in the area to advance.

It is also not clear what kind of justice would be meted out to those surrendering militants in the absence of established courts in Kurdish-dominated northern Syria.

A senior local Kurdish commander said foreign fighters were unlikely to surrender so his forces are expecting to “comb them out” of at least two neighborhoods. He said it could be a matter of a day or two.

Scores of civilians were seen in a video Friday leaving Raqqa in desperate and terrified conditions.

They emerged from destroyed districts, some of them collapsing on the ground in exhaustion as they arrived at a Kurdish-held area of the city, in haunting scenes reflecting their years-long ordeals.

The US-led coalition said it expects “difficult fighting” in the days ahead to completely oust IS from the city and secure it. SDF and US officials said the remaining militants are mostly suicide bombers who only have small arms and rifles. Backed into a small area, they have no access to their weapon of choice, car bombs, said Mustafa Bali, an SDF spokesman.

Also Saturday, the Syrian and Russian militaries announced that Syrian troops and allied fighters had seized the town of Mayadeen, an Islamic State stronghold in the country’s east. The Russian Defense Ministry’s spokesman, Maj. Gen. Igor Konashenkov, said Syrian soldiers had driven IS fighters from the town, which he said was the extremist group’s last major stronghold in eastern Syria.

Over the past months, Mayadeen had become a refuge for IS’s leaders as they faced an intense crackdown in Syria and Iraq.

In this file photo from Sept. 15, 2017, Russian military police officers walk outside a hospital in Deir Ezzor, Syria. (AP Photo, File)

With the fall of Mayadeen and retaking of Raqqa, Islamic State fighters are losing two of their last strongholds in Syria as their self-declared caliphate crumbles. The militants are currently besieged in the city of Deir Ezzor, leaving them with one last major urban bastion, the strategic town of Boukamal, on the border with Syria and Iraq.

Militants seized Raqqa in 2014, the first city to fall under the full control of the extremist group, and declared it the caliphate of their self-styled caliphate. It became synonymous with IS’s reign of terror, with public killings and beheadings — videotaped slayings that have shocked the world. It was also from Raqqa, which became a destination for foreign fighters from around the world, that many of IS’s attacks in the West were plotted.

The latest battle for Raqqa began in June, with heavy street-by-street fighting amid intense US-led coalition airstrikes and shelling. The battle has dragged on in the face of stiff resistance from the militants.

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