Daesh militants kill at least 18 people in an attack on villagers collecting truffles in eastern Syria

Gunmen thought to be linked to the Daesh group in Syria killed 18 people searching for truffles in the desert on Wednesday, and more than 50 remained missing, a war monitor said. (AFP/File)
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Updated 06 March 2024
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Daesh militants kill at least 18 people in an attack on villagers collecting truffles in eastern Syria

  • It was one of the deadliest attacks by the Daesh group in the area in more than a year
  • About 50 people were missing and might have been kidnapped by Daesh

BEIRUT: Daesh militants attacked villagers collecting truffles in eastern Syria on Wednesday, killing at least 18 people and leaving dozens injured and missing, opposition activists and pro-government media said.
It was one of the deadliest attacks by the Daesh group in the area in more than a year, they said. The attack occurred in a desert area near the town of Kobajeb, in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor that borders Iraq.
Despite the militant group’s defeat in Syria in March 2019, Daesh sleeper cells still carry deadly attacks in Syria and neighboring Iraq, across a wide swath of territory where the extremists had once run an Islamic caliphate.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition war monitor, said 18 people were killed and 16 were wounded in Wednesday’s attack. It said about 50 people were missing and might have been kidnapped by Daesh. Twelve vehicles were torched.
The Observatory said the dead included four members of the pro-government National Defense Forces, which had sent reinforcements to the area.
The pro-government Dama Post media outlet said the death toll was as high as 44 and that some 13 vehicles used by the truffle farmers were set fire to and destroyed.
The disparate casualty figures could not be immediately reconciled. Different death tolls in Syria are not uncommon in the immediate aftermath of deadly attacks.
The truffles are a seasonal delicacy that can be sold for a high price and many in Syria, where 90 percent of the population lives below the poverty line, go out to collect them.
Since the truffle hunters work in large groups in remote areas, Daesh militants in previous years have repeatedly preyed on them, emerging from the desert to kill many and abduct others to be ransomed for money.
In February 2023, Daesh militants killed dozens of civilians and security officers in an attack on truffle hunters in the deserts of central Syria.


114 killed in week of attacks in Sudan’s Darfur: medical sources

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114 killed in week of attacks in Sudan’s Darfur: medical sources

PORT SUDAN: Attacks by Sudan’s army and its paramilitary foes on two towns in the western Darfur region over the past week have killed 114 people, medical sources told AFP Sunday.
Since April 2023, Sudan has been gripped by a war between the army and the paramilitary Rapid Support Forces (RSF), which in October seized the army’s last holdout position in Darfur.
The RSF has since pushed west to the Chadian border and east through the vast Kordofan region, where a drone strike on the North Kordofan capital of El-Obeid on Sunday caused a blackout in the key army-controlled city.
A medical source reported Sunday that 51 people were killed the day before in drone strikes attributed to the army on the North Darfur town of Al-Zuruq, 180 kilometers (112 miles) north of the RSF-overrun state capital El-Fashir.
The strike hit a market and civilian areas, the source said.
Al-Zuruq, under RSF control, is home to family members of RSF commander Mohamed Hamdan Dagalo, the former deputy of his now rival, army chief Abdel Fattah Al-Burhan.
“Two of the Dagalo family were killed, Moussa Saleh Dagalo and Awad Moussa Saleh Dagalo,” an eyewitness to the burial told AFP.
Both the RSF and the army are accused of targeting civilian areas, in what the UN has called a “war of atrocities.”
RSF fighters advancing westward toward the border with Chad last week killed another 63 people in and around the town of Kernoi, a medical source in the local hospital told AFP Sunday.
“Until Friday, 63 were killed and 57 injured... in attacks launched by the RSF around Kernoi,” they said, speaking on condition of anonymity for their safety.
Local sources told AFP that 17 people were still missing.
The entire Darfur region is largely inaccessible to reporters and is under a years-long communications blackout, forcing local volunteers and medics to use satellite Internet to get news to the world.
According to the United Nations, over 7,000 people were displaced in just two days last month from Kernoi and the nearby village of Um Baru.
Many are from the Zaghawa group, which has been targeted by the RSF. Members of the group have fought in the current war alongside the army in a coalition known as the Joint Forces.
‘Attacked by drones’
Since the war began, tens of thousands have been killed and millions displaced.
Much of the worst fighting has been in Darfur, reviving memories of mass ethnic atrocities committed in the 2000s by the Janjaweed, the RSF’s predecessor.
The war’s fiercest violence is currently unfolding in Kordofan, Sudan’s vast oil-rich southern region that links Darfur to the capital Khartoum, which the army recaptured last year.
Drone strikes on North Kordofan capital El-Obeid caused a power outage, the national electricity company said.
“El-Obeid power station ... was attacked by drones, leading to a fire in the machinery building, which led to a halt in the electricity supply,” the company said.
Following its victory in El-Fasher, the RSF has sought to recapture Sudan’s central corridor, tightening its siege with its local allies around several army-held cities.
Hundreds of thousands face mass starvation across the region.
Last year, the army broke a paramilitary siege on El-Obeid, which the RSF has sought to encircle since.
The Joint Forces said last week they had retaken several towns south of El-Obeid, which according to a military source could “open up the road between El-Obeid and Dilling” — one of South Kordofan’s besieged cities.
Since mid-December, some 11,000 people have been displaced from North and South Kordofan states, according to the UN’s International Organization for Migration.
The war has forced more than 11 million people to flee internally and across Sudan’s borders, many of them seeking shelter in underdeveloped areas with a lack of nutrition, medicine and clean water.