From the
city, the group planned attacks abroad. The SDF, backed by a U.S.-led
international alliance, has been fighting Islamic State inside Raqqa since
June. Another Reuters witness said militia fighters celebrated in the streets,
chanting slogans from their vehicles. A group of militia fighters and
commanders clasped their arms round each other, smiling, in a battle-scarred
landscape of rubble and ruined buildings at a public square.
The flag
in the stadium and others waved in the city streets bore the yellow background
and red emblem of the Kurdish YPG, the strongest militia in the SDF. “We do
still know there are still IEDs and booby traps in and amongst the areas that
ISIS once held, so the SDF will continue to clear deliberately through areas,”
said Colonel Ryan Dillon, a spokesman for the coalition.
In a sign
that the four-month battle for Raqqa had been in its last stages, Dillon said
there were no coalition air strikes there on Monday. Islamic State has lost
swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq this year, including its most prized
possession, Mosul, and in Syria it has been forced back into a strip of the
Euphrates valley and surrounding desert.
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