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The Independent UK
The Independent UK
World
Samuel Osborne

Around 200 families trapped in final Isis territory in Syria as US-led airstrikes continue

Around 200 families are trapped in a tiny pocket of land in Syria still controlled by Isis and are being bombed by US-led coalition forces, the UN has said.

The US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) are on the brink of defeating the terror group in its last enclave, which has been reduced to a few dozen tents in a small village in Deir ez-Zor.

The group estimates around 300 Isis militants and about 2,000 civilians are under siege, and Michelle Bachelet, the UN’s human rights chief, said militants were stopping some families from fleeing.

Many of the families “continue to be subjected to intensified air and ground-based strikes by the US-led Coalition forces and their SDF allies on the ground,” Ms Bachelet said in a statement.

The SDF attacking Isis have an obligation under international law to take all precautions to protect civilians who are mixed in with the foreign fighters, her spokesman Rupert Colville told a briefing.

“We understand that [Isis] appears to be preventing some of them if not all of them from leaving. So that’s potentially a war crime on the part of [Isis],” Mr Colville said.

The Isis militants are refusing to surrender and are attempting to negotiate an exit with the forces surrounding them as they hide among civilians in a tiny orchard in the village of Baghouz.

“Civilians continue to be used as pawns by the various parties,” Ms Bachelet said. “I call on them to provide safe passage to those who wish to flee, while those wish to remain must also be protected as much as possible.

“They should not be sacrificed to ideology on the one hand, or military expediency on the other. If protecting civilian lives means taking a few more days to capture the last fraction of land controlled by [Isis], then so be it.”

The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said around 50 trucks had entered the Isis-held area, apparently to bring out some of those trapped inside.

More than 60 people have died in recent weeks as they fled what remains of Isis territory, the International Rescue Committee said on Monday.

Spokesman Paul Donohoe said exhaustion and malnutrition are the principle causes of the deaths. He said of the at least 62 people who had died, two thirds were children under the age of one.

Isis members in the last besieged neighbourhood in the village of Baghouz, Deir ez-Zor province, Syria (REUTERS/Rodi Said)

Over 30,000 people who left the last Isis-held areas have arrived at the al-Hol camp in Syria’s northern Hassakeh province in the last few weeks, raising the overall population of the camp to almost 42,000.

Ms Bachelet also voiced conern for those who had fled the Isis-controlled territories and are being held by Kurdish armed groups, including the SDF, who are reportedly preventing them from leaving the camps, she said.

“Particular care needs to be taken with the civilians and if possible they should be treated humanely, and allowed to leave the camps. They shouldn’t be held in detention unless they are suspected of committing a particular crime,” Mr Colville said.

Kurdish-led forces continuing the fight on the ground have said they are on the verge of capturing Isis’ last bastion.

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