Syria Kurds Say in Near Complete Control of Hasaka City
(Reuters) -- A Syrian Kurdish militia said on Monday
it was in near full control of the northeastern city of Hasaka,
expanding its sway at the expense of the Damascus government in the wake
of an Islamic State attack in the area.
Full control of Hasaka -
which was split between the Kurds and Damascus until last month - would
be a major gain for the autonomous Kurdish administration that is
fighting Islamic State in Syria in partnership with Washington.
Islamic
State launched a major attack on the city on June 25, focusing
initially on government-held southern Hasaka. The ensuing battle drew in
the YPG, which held northern Hasaka, resulting in the U.S.-backed Kurds
fighting Islamic State in close proximity to government forces shunned
by Washington.
YPG spokesman Redur Xelil said the city's defense
was now entirely in his group's hands. "The regime has collapsed. It
could not protect the city and its continuation has become symbolic in
limited positions only," he told Reuters.
The statement was at
odds with state media reports indicating a strong performance by the
Syrian army in the battle for Hasaka. State TV on Monday
said the army had made progress against Islamic State to the southeast
of the city, encircling its fighters and killing a large number of them.
The
YPG's Xelil said his group had deployed in the southern outskirts of
Hasaka, meaning it controlled all routes in and out of the city and had
encircled Islamic State fighters inside.
The Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights, a UK-based group that reports on the war using sources
on the ground, echoed that assessment, saying the YPG had besieged
Islamic State forces from the south and were positioned to advance into
the city.
Xelil said the YPG had also taken areas from Islamic
State within the city itself in the last two days. The advances were
ongoing. While the YPG held half the city before the Islamic State
attack, it now held "the overwhelming majority", he said.
OUTPOSTS
With
the Syrian government seeking to shore up its control over the main
population centers of western Syria, including Damascus, Hasaka city is
one of five outlying areas where Assad has sought to preserve control in
recent fighting.
Hasaka is the capital of surrounding province by
the same name. Assad has lost control of two other provincial capitals -
Raqqa and Idlib. The army and allied militia are fighting two rebel
offensives aimed at capturing two more: Aleppo and Deraa.
The YPG
and the Syrian government have mostly coexisted in predominantly Kurdish
areas of Syria where a Kurdish administration has emerged since the
uprising against Assad erupted in 2011.
The sides still share
control of the city of Qamishli to the north of Hasaka, where the
government controls an airport, though tensions have flared in the last
few months. The YPG has denied claims it cooperates with government
forces.
Hasaka is important in the fight against Islamic State because it borders territory held by the group in Iraq.
Growing
Kurdish sway in northern Syria has alarmed neighboring Turkey, which is
worried about separatist sentiment among its own Kurdish minority.
The
YPG, backed by U.S.-led air strikes, has seized wide areas of territory
from Islamic State this year, including the town of Tel Abyad at the
border with Turkey.
Rami Abdulrahman, who runs the Observatory,
said the YPG was advancing at the expense of the government and Islamic
State in Hasaka, where he said the military's role was restricted to
aerial bombardment and long-range artillery attacks: "The coming attack
(against Islamic State in Hasaka) will be by the YPG."
Hasaka city was one of two areas where the YPG says Islamic State used poison gas against YPG-held areas in late June.
Tuesday, July 21, 2015
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