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US-led strikes kill up to 150 IS fighters in Syria: coalition
by Staff Writers
Washington (AFP) Jan 23, 2018


Number of Syrians who died of cold fleeing to Lebanon rises to 17
Beirut (AFP) Jan 23, 2018 - At least 17 Syrians trying to flee to Lebanon have died of extreme cold and a snowstorm on the border since last week, a Lebanese security official said Tuesday.

Lebanon's ANI news agency said that "the body of a Syrian refugee woman who had died of the cold" was retrieved on Tuesday in the border region.

The latest find raises the number of such deaths since Friday to 17, the security official told AFP.

The army and civil defence services said Friday that two children and six women were among 10 Syrians whose frozen bodies were found, and the death toll rose over the weekend.

Lebanon, a country of four million, hosts just under a million Syrians who have sought refuge from the war raging in their neighbouring homeland since 2011.

Many live in informal tented settlements in the country's east and struggle to stay warm in the winter.

The UN's children's agency UNICEF said on Saturday that it was distributing blankets, warm clothes and heating fuel to refugees.

In 2015, Lebanese authorities introduced new restrictions to curb the number of Syrians entering the country, which shares a rocky 330-kilometre (205-mile) border with Syria with no official demarcation at several points.

The US-led coalition has killed as many as 150 Islamic State fighters in an operation in the middle Euphrates River Valley in Syria, officials said Tuesday.

According to a coalition statement, the air strikes took place Saturday near Al-Shafah, in Deir Ezzor province, on an IS headquarters where the jihadists appeared to have been "massing for movement."

"The precision strikes were a culmination of extensive intelligence preparation to confirm an ISIS headquarters and command and control center in an exclusively ISIS-occupied location in the contested middle Euphrates River Valley," the statement read.

While IS has lost most of the terrain they once controlled in Syria, they still remain entrenched in pockets along the middle Euphrates River Valley.

"There's still have a heavy fight going on," said US Central Command spokesman Lieutenant Colonel Earl Brown.

"We are continuing to go after those guys that are trying to reestablish themselves. It's a hard fight right now."

The coalition said that the Syrian Democratic Forces, a US-backed Arab-Kurdish alliance fighting IS, had assisted in target observation prior to the strike.

"The combination of intelligence and continuous eyes on the target ensured no accidental engagement of non-military personnel," the statement read.

The coalition's highlighting of the SDF's role comes as Kurdish fighters in northern Syria are under assault by Turkey.

Washington is treading a fraught line in Syria, on the one hand trying to maintain its relationship with NATO ally Turkey -- which views Kurdish fighters as terrorists -- while on the other continuing to support Kurdish ground forces that have been critical to the defeat of IS.

"Our SDF partners are still making daily progress and sacrifices, and together we are still finding, targeting and killing ISIS terrorists intent on keeping their extremist hold on the region," Major General James Jarrard said.

TERROR WARS
Iraq condemns German woman to death for belonging to IS
Baghdad (AFP) Jan 21, 2018
An Iraqi court said Sunday it had condemned to death by hanging a German woman of Moroccan origin after finding her guilty of belonging to the Islamic State jihadist group. She is one of hundreds of foreign jihadists held by Iraqi authorities, who in December announced the defeat of IS after a gruelling three-year battle. The German was sentenced for providing "logistical support and hel ... read more

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