US-backed forces press offensive against IS Syria enclave
Denying reports the militant enclave had fallen
SOUSSA, SYRIA:
US-backed forces pressed an offensive against the Islamic State group in its last redoubt in Syria on Thursday, denying reports the militant enclave had fallen.
"Mopping up operations continue in Baghouz camp," the command of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) said in a brief statement.
The SDF, which launched a final assault against the village of Baghouz in eastern Syria on February 9, denied reports that the IS enclave had completely fallen to its forces.
Attack slows on Islamic State Syria pocket to save civilians: official
"The information of the total liberation of the village is unfounded," said the command.
An AFP team on the ground saw trucks carrying people out of Baghouz on Wednesday night.
Thousands of people have fled the besieged IS pocket in recent weeks and turned themselves in.
Since January, some 67,000 people have left the enclave, including 5,000 militants who surrendered, according to the SDF.
On Tuesday the advancing Kurdish-led SDF announced its forces had driven diehard fighters out of the main encampment where they had been confined in recent days.
"This is not a victory announcement, but a significant progress in the fight against Daesh," SDF spokesperson Mustefa Bali said, using an Arabic acronym for IS.
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday praised the progress of the fight against IS since he came to power, saying the fall of their self-proclaimed "caliphate" was imminent.
"The caliphate is gone as of tonight," Trump said at a military tank factory in Lima, Ohio.
The US president has signalled the group's imminent demise on several previous occasions, although IS has yet to wave the white flag of surrender.
Trump, who announced in December the withdrawal of some 2,000 US troops who had been deployed in Syria, said about 400 of them would remain on the ground "for a period of time".
IS declared a "caliphate" in June 2014 across territory it seized in Iraq and Syria.
Post-IS, north Iraq's minority mosaic blown apart by trauma
The loss of the Baghouz enclave would signal the demise of the "caliphate" in Syria, after its defeat in Iraq in 2017.
But IS has already begun its transformation into a guerilla organisation, and still carries out deadly hit-and-run attacks from desert or mountain hideouts.
Syria's war has killed more than 370,000 people and displaced millions since it began with the repression of anti-government protests in 2011.
US-backed forces pressed an offensive against the Islamic State group in its last redoubt in Syria on Thursday, denying reports the militant enclave had fallen.
"Mopping up operations continue in Baghouz camp," the command of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) said in a brief statement.
The SDF, which launched a final assault against the village of Baghouz in eastern Syria on February 9, denied reports that the IS enclave had completely fallen to its forces.
Attack slows on Islamic State Syria pocket to save civilians: official
"The information of the total liberation of the village is unfounded," said the command.
An AFP team on the ground saw trucks carrying people out of Baghouz on Wednesday night.
Thousands of people have fled the besieged IS pocket in recent weeks and turned themselves in.
Since January, some 67,000 people have left the enclave, including 5,000 militants who surrendered, according to the SDF.
On Tuesday the advancing Kurdish-led SDF announced its forces had driven diehard fighters out of the main encampment where they had been confined in recent days.
"This is not a victory announcement, but a significant progress in the fight against Daesh," SDF spokesperson Mustefa Bali said, using an Arabic acronym for IS.
US President Donald Trump on Wednesday praised the progress of the fight against IS since he came to power, saying the fall of their self-proclaimed "caliphate" was imminent.
"The caliphate is gone as of tonight," Trump said at a military tank factory in Lima, Ohio.
The US president has signalled the group's imminent demise on several previous occasions, although IS has yet to wave the white flag of surrender.
Trump, who announced in December the withdrawal of some 2,000 US troops who had been deployed in Syria, said about 400 of them would remain on the ground "for a period of time".
IS declared a "caliphate" in June 2014 across territory it seized in Iraq and Syria.
Post-IS, north Iraq's minority mosaic blown apart by trauma
The loss of the Baghouz enclave would signal the demise of the "caliphate" in Syria, after its defeat in Iraq in 2017.
But IS has already begun its transformation into a guerilla organisation, and still carries out deadly hit-and-run attacks from desert or mountain hideouts.
Syria's war has killed more than 370,000 people and displaced millions since it began with the repression of anti-government protests in 2011.