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TERROR WARS
'Caliphate' survivors recount fleeing clutches of IS
By Thibauld Malterre and Safa Majeed
Qayyarah, Iraq (AFP) Oct 25, 2016


'Groundwork' being laid for 'isolation' of Raqa: US
Paris (AFP) Oct 25, 2016 - The US-led coalition is "laying the groundwork" for the "isolation" of Raqa, the Islamic State group stronghold in Syria, US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter said Tuesday.

"We have already begun laying the groundwork for our partners to commence the isolation of Raqa," Carter said after meeting coalition defence ministers in Paris to discuss the aftermath of the planned capture of Mosul from IS in Iraq.

"Today we resolved to follow through with that same sense of urgency and focus on enveloping and collapsing ISIL's control of Raqa," he added, using another acronym for IS.

Carter said the coalition would rely on "capable and motivated local forces that we identify and then enable" to wrest the city from the Sunni extremists.

"That is our general strategic approach. We are seeking a lasting defeat of ISIL and a lasting defeat can't be achieved by outside.

"It can only be achieved by those who live there," he said, adding: "These will be Syrians enabled by us."

Carter was among a dozen ministers from coalition members attending the talks, which come a week after Iraqi forces backed by Kurdish fighters launched a major operation to retake Mosul, Iraq's second-biggest city.

Addressing the gathering French President Francois Hollande reiterated warnings about IS fighters in Mosul fleeing across the border to Raqa.

He also urged vigilance over the risk of foreign jihadists returning home from the battlefield.

Hollande urges vigilance over jihadists returning from Iraq
Paris (AFP) Oct 25, 2016 - French President Francois Hollande on Tuesday urged the US-led coalition backing the offensive against Islamic State jihadists in Mosul to prepare for the aftermath of the city's fall, including returning fighters.

"The recapture is not an end in itself. We must already anticipate the consequences of the fall of Mosul," he told a meeting of coalition defence chiefs in Paris.

US Defence Secretary Ashton Carter and ministers from 12 other countries attended the talks, which come a week after Iraqi forces backed by Kurdish fighters launched a major operation to retake Iraq's second-biggest city.

"What is at stake is the political future of the city, the region and Iraq," Hollande said, calling for "all ethnic and religious groups" to have a say in the future running of the predominantly Sunni city.

He also appealed for measures to shield civilians trapped in Mosul by the fighting and for "vigilance" faced with the prospect of return foreign jihadists returning home from the Iraqi battlefield.

Of the estimated 4,000-5,000 jihadists fighting in Mosul, around 300 are French, according to French officials.

Hollande reiterated French warnings about IS fighters in Mosul fleeing across the border to Raqa, the group's stronghold in Syria.

"We must clearly identify them," he said.

The French leader also called on the ministers to set out "the stages of the next operations" against IS, namely retaking Raqa.

"If Mosul falls, Raqa will be Daesh's last bastion," he said, using another name for IS, which is also known by the acronyms of ISIS or ISIL.

"We must see to it that Daesh is destroyed and eradicated everywhere."

Their escape from jihadist rule was gruelling and their new living conditions hardly better, but the Iraqis fleeing south of Mosul are only the first of a feared massive exodus.

Qayyarah is not only the main staging base for the huge offensive Iraqi forces launched to retake Mosul on October 17 -- it is also where displaced families in the area are converging.

"We walked all night to escape the jihadists and just before arriving here, our neighbours were killed in a bomb blast," said Umm Mahmud, a woman from Hawijah.

Her town lies in an area near Kirkuk on the other bank of the Tigris river and is one of the last bastions of the Islamic State group that took over swathes of Iraq in 2014 and declared an Islamic "caliphate".

She and her family fled to Qayyarah, an area recaptured from the jihadists a few weeks ago and which is now the main hub behind the southern lines of the Mosul battlefield.

There she joined the growing number of people who are fleeing the fighting and two years of brutal jihadist rule, travelling in the opposite direction to thousands of forces battling their way northward to Mosul.

"An IS member helped us flee. He asked for $100 per person to take us to a nearby village," said the woman.

They were then left alone to trek through a minefield planted by the jihadists, she said.

Only slightly more than 5,000 people are believed to have fled their homes since the start of the offensive a week ago, but the United Nations believes that more than a million people are still trapped inside Mosul.

When Iraqi forces get closer to the boundaries of the city, aid groups expect a huge outflow of civilians which they fear existing infrastructure simply will not be able to handle.

The Jedaah camp in Qayyarah is run by the authorities of Nineveh province, of which Mosul is the capital.

- Food shortages -

It opened on October 19 and is supported by aid groups and the UN's Children Fund.

A few kilometres (miles) north, the fleeing families are screened at a checkpoint manned by the Iraqi security forces who were herding the newly displaced residents towards Qayyarah.

They left their homes for various reasons, some of them to avoid being caught in clashes between advancing federal forces and die-hard IS fighters.

Others left because of dwindling food supplies.

"If you're with IS you get everything you need. But the others have nothing to eat because of the blockade," one of the recently arrived told AFP.

Dozens of civilians huddled together near the camp which was littered with trash, as wind blew in clouds of smoke from burning oil wells and a fire at a nearby sulphur plant.

Most of them escaped the "caliphate" with just one or two bags containing some clothes and other essentials.

"The jihadists fled our village south of Mosul four days ago, slipping out from the Iraqi forces' siege under the cover of night," said Abu Jowaher, 27.

"We were left there alone, with no water or food," he said.

"Some of us decided to leave too and others stayed back to look after the sheep," he said, as an ambulance returned from the front line to the north.

A small pick-up truck followed behind full of displaced people, including one man still waving his white flag.


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Previous Report
TERROR WARS
Kuwait admits it needs to do more against IS funding
Kuwait City (AFP) Oct 24, 2016
Kuwait still needs to do more to combat the financing of jihadists, a top Kuwaiti official said Monday at a meeting aimed at choking off funding for the Islamic State group. "We still have a lot to do, though we are satisfied with what we have done so far," Deputy Foreign Minister Khaled al-Jarallah told reporters on the sideline of a meeting of the Counter-ISIL Finance Group (CIFG) in Kuwai ... read more


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