Daesh audio calls on followers to avenge Syria push

Civilians who streamed out of the Daesh group’s last Syrian stronghold sit at a screening point for new arrivals run by US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces outside Baghouz in the eastern Syrian Deir Ezzor province on March 5, 2019. (AFP/Delil Souleiman)
Updated 12 March 2019
Follow

Daesh audio calls on followers to avenge Syria push

  • The audio calls on Muslim “brothers, in Europe and in the whole world” to “rise against the Crusaders and ... take revenge for your religion”
  • The recording’s authenticity couldn’t be independently verified

BAGHOUZ, Syria: Besieged by US-backed forces in their last foothold in eastern Syria, Daesh militants are calling on supporters across the world to stage attacks in their defense, according to a newly released audio recording.

The recording, purportedly from Daesh, came as the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces continued to face stiff resistance Tuesday from Daesh gunmen as US-backed fighters try to push deeper into the village of Baghouz on the eastern bank of the Euphrates River.

The brief, minute-and-a half recording, released by Daesh supporters on social media and reported by the SITE Intelligence Group late on Monday said that men, women and children in Baghouz are being subjected to a “holocaust by the Crusaders,” which is militant jargon for the US-led coalition against Daesh.

In the audio, an unidentified Daesh militant calls on Muslim “brothers, in Europe and in the whole world” to “rise against the Crusaders and ... take revenge for your religion.” As the man speaks, cracks of gunfire can be heard in the background, apparently meant to suggest that he is in Baghouz.

“Crusaders warplanes” and “Kurdish atheists” are attacking his people, the man says. The recording's authenticity couldn't be independently verified.

The US-backed forces resumed their offensive against the Daesh group on Sunday night, after thousands of civilians and hundreds of fighters left the last sliver held by the extremists. Since then, 38 militants and three SDF fighters have been killed, according to SDF spokesman Mustafa Bali.

Argish al-Deiri, an SDF commander in Baghouz who identified himself by his nom de guerre told The Associated Press on Tuesday that his men advanced overnight and secured some positions on the edge of a tent settlement where Daesh militants are making their last stand.

“We entered the camp, then stopped,” he said. “There was resistance, and we withdrew. The planes struck the ammunition depot,” setting off explosions that halted the push.

He said Daesh militants were fighting back with heavy weapons, rifles and sniper fire, forcing SDF fighters to slow their advance rather than advancing quickly so that “you don't lose your men.”

He said he hoped the Daesh fighters will surrender in the coming “few days.”

The capture of Baghouz would be a milestone in the devastating four-year campaign to defeat Daesh's so-called “caliphate,” which once covered a vast territory straddling both Syria and Iraq.


Drone strikes blamed on Iran hit Iranian Kurdish camp in Iraq: official, exiled group

Updated 2 sec ago
Follow

Drone strikes blamed on Iran hit Iranian Kurdish camp in Iraq: official, exiled group

IRBIL: Drone stikes blamed on Iran hit on Tuesday a camp hosting Iranian Kurdish fighters and family members in northern Iraq, a local official and an exiled opposition group said.
Iraq’s northern autonomous Kurdish region hosts camps and rear-bases operated by several Iranian Kurdish rebel groups, which have repeatedly faced cross-border strikes from Iran.
A local official in the Koysinjaq district, Tareq Al-Haidari, told AFP “three Iranian drones targeted the Azadi camp, which belongs to Iranian Kurdish opposition parties in the district.”
One drone directly hit the camp’s hospital, wounding one person, said Haidari and a commander from the Democratic Party of Iranian Kurdistan (PDKI).
PDKI commander Mohammed Nazif Kader told AFP “drones and missiles attacked the camp,” blaming the attack on Iran.
For decades, the Koysinjaq district, known as Koya to Kurds, has been home to the PDKI.
Iran has designated Kurdish opposition groups as terrorist organizations, and has accused them of serving Western or Israeli interests in the past.
These groups have previously fought Iranian security forces in Kurdish-majority areas along the border.
But in recent years, they have largely refrained from armed activity, although they continue to actively campaign from exile against the Islamic republic.
Last week, five groups, including the PDKI, announced a political coalition to seek the overthrow of Iran’s Islamic republic and ultimately to secure Kurdish self-determination.