(Reuters) -
Syrian government forces struck Islamic State positions in and around
the eastern Syrian city of Raqqa, residents said on Monday, part of a
growing campaign against hardline militants who control a third of the
country. Raqqa is a major stronghold of the Islamic State, formerly known as the Islamic State in Iraq
and the Levant (ISIL), which took one of the Syrian army's last
outposts in the city this week to extend its gains across both Iraq and Syria. Residents
said there had been some 16 air raids on Monday on Raqqa and in nearby
areas, including close to the al-Tabqa military base to the west of the
city, a government-controlled airport that is surrounded by militants. One attack destroyed the city's water plant, locals said, cutting water supplies to homes and businesses. More
than 170,000 people have been killed in Syria's three-year-old civil
war, with Islamic State fighters gaining momentum in recent weeks,
boosted by equipment seized in a rapid offensive in neighboring Iraq. In response, the Syrian army has become more aggressive, using air strikes to attack their positions. "The
bombardment increases then falls off, but when they are not bombing
al-Tabqa airport they are bombing the surrounding towns or bombing
Raqqa. The sound of aircraft is constant," a Raqqa resident said,
asking to remain anonymous to protect his identity. Locals
in Raqqa say civilian casualties have been kept to a minimum because
many residents have fled to nearby villages and rural areas, while those
remaining spend their days in shelters. The Islamic State's Syria
headquarters are situated in what used to be Raqqa's municipality
buildings in densely populated civilian areas. "It is these buildings
that are now targeted in the air raids," said an opposition activist
living in the city, who opposes both the Islamic State and the
government. He said that the air force was now using Russian-made Sukhoi bombers, which carry bigger munitions than MiG fighter jets. Until
this summer, President Bashar al-Assad's forces held off from targeting
the al Qaeda offshoot, allowing the group to thrive, while weakening
less hardline opposition groups that are backed by the West. Assad
has long painted the uprising in Syria as a foreign-backed Islamist
conspiracy and his enemies say he has allowed the Islamic State to grow
to promote that idea. Damascus has not commented on why it was now focusing on Islamic State fighters rather that other rebel groups. The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has tracked violence on all
sides of the conflict that began in March 2011, said government forces
and Islamic State fighters fought in two villages in Raqqa province on
Monday, al-Ajeel and al-Khazaneh near the Tabqa airport. The
conflict in Syria started when Assad cracked down on a pro-democracy
uprising, which then armed itself. The war pits overwhelmingly Sunni
Muslim rebels against Assad, a member of the Shi'ite-derived Alawite
minority, backed by Shi'ite militias from Iraq and Lebanon.
Syrian forces hit Islamic State in Raqqa, destroy water plant
Reuters
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.