US-backed Kurdish-led forces retake Syrian prison from IS

26 January 2022, 15:34

American soldiers deploy in Hassakeh, in Syria, on Tuesday
Syria IS. Picture: PA

The operation ended a weeklong assault by the extremists on one of the largest detention facilities in the country.

US-backed Kurdish-led forces said they wrestled control of the last section of a prison in Syria controlled by so-called Islamic State (IS) militants and freed a number of child detainees used as human shields.

It ended a weeklong assault by the extremists on one of the largest detention facilities in the country.

The attack was the biggest by IS since the fall of the group’s “caliphate” in 2019 and came as the militants staged a number of deadly attacks in Syria and Iraq that stoked fears they may be staging a comeback.

Dozens from both sides have been killed in the week of clashes. The US-led coalition has carried out nearly a dozen airstrikes and thousands of civilians living nearby have been displaced.

“The whole prison is now under control,” Farhad Shami, a spokesman for the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) said.

“The operation today was on the cells where child detainees were held. We were able to surround a number of terrorists who had taken them as shields and we killed them.”

Mr Shami said the force was then able to enter the cells and the remaining militants surrendered.

A large number of children were freed, he added, but he had no specific number.

Mr Shami said about 3,000 inmates had surrendered.

The militants had used child detainees as human shields slowing down the effort to retake the facility located in the northeastern city of Hassakeh, Kurdish officials said.

After breaking into the prison late on Thursday, IS militants were joined by others rioting inside the facility. Around 200 armed militants were believed to be holed up in the northern wing at one end of the prison complex, holding hostages from among the prison staff.

The Syria prison complex, known as al-Sinaa or Gweiran prison, houses more than 3,000 inmates, including around 600 minors.

Children have reportedly been killed and wounded in clashes, human rights and aid groups say.

Soldiers with the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces check a house in Hassakeh in Syria
Soldiers with the US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces check a house in Hassakeh (Hogir Al Abdo/AP)

The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 124 IS militants, 50 fighters with the Kurdish-led forces and seven civilians were killed in the weeklong attack that extended outside the walls of the prison into residential areas. Thousands of civilians had been displaced.

The assault began on Thursday just hours before another attack on military troops in neighbouring Iraq.

Together, they signalled a new spike in violence by militants who had for months been carrying out low-level assaults, largely on security patrols, checkpoints and other mobile targets.

Eleven Iraqi soldiers were killed in their sleep after gunmen attacked an army barracks in Diyala province on Friday. It was the deadliest attack in months to target Iraq’s military and was blamed on IS, which appeared to be exploiting a security vacuum in Iraq’s north.

The vacuum is perpetuated by territorial disputes between the federal government and the semi-autonomous Kurdish region.

The Kurdish-led SDF said earlier on Wednesday that it had freed 23 of its servicemen held hostage by IS militants. It later said inmates continued to surrender.

The SDF, backed by US-led coalition Bradley Fighting Vehicles and air support, had been closing in on the prison wing controlled by the armed militants.

The al-Hol camp, which houses families of members of IS in Hasakeh province in Syria
The al-Hol camp, which houses families of members of IS in Hasakeh province (Baderkhan Ahmad/AP)

Fighters from the SDF and other security teams took control of adjacent buildings and used loudspeakers to call on the militants to surrender.

The IS group’s territorial control in Iraq and Syria was crushed by a years-long US-backed campaign, but some fighters remained at large in sleeper cells that have increasingly killed scores of Iraqis and Syrians in past months.

Prison riots have been common, where thousands of suspected IS militants have been held. But the attack launched late on Thursday was the boldest and most ambitious.

Sleeper cells from outside the prison, nearly 100, attacked the facility after dark, ramming vehicles against its walls and detonating car bombs to create a diversion. They were joined by rioting inmates, and some managed to escape.

The SDF said the total number of fugitives remained unclear.

A recording obtained from inside the prison by a teenage detainee described a violent onslaught that had left multiple children dead and many wounded inside the facility.

By Press Association

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