Islamic State fighters holed up in one of the militant
group’s last major strongholds in northern Syria have 48 hours to leave the
city, according to an ultimatum issued by the local military council of the
United States-supported Syria Democratic Forces.
The two-day window opened after the main Syrian exile
opposition group called on the coalition to halt its bombing of militant
positions near the city of Manbij after dozens of civilians were reported
killed this week in airstrikes by the United States-led coalition.
The Syrian Observatory of Human Rights, based in Britain, has
reported that more than 100 civilians have died in airstrikes in the area since
late May, when militias supported by the United States and its coalition
partners in Syria began an offensive to seize Manbij from the Islamic State,
also known as ISIS and ISIL.
On Tuesday, the observatory reported that airstrikes north of
Manbij killed at least 56 civilians, including 11 children. A day before, 21
people were killed in raids in the area also believed to have been conducted by
coalition aircraft in Manbij.
Kurdish and Arab forces, aided by the airstrikes, have
surrounded the city, but have been unable to fully dislodge the Islamic State
from the area.
A statement from the Manbij Military Council posted on the
Syria Democratic Forces online chat room said that Islamic State fighters, who
have been using civilians in Manbij as human shields, will have 48 hours to
leave the city with only their light weapons before bombings resume.
The president of the Syrian Opposition Coalition, a political
exile group that opposes both the Islamic State and the Syrian government, said
that airstrikes should be halted to allow for an investigation into the
reported civilian deaths in and around Manbij.
“We believe that such incidents indicate a major loophole in
the current operational rules followed by the international coalition in
conducting strikes in populated areas,” Anas Alabdah, the president of the
Syrian Opposition Coalition, said in a letter to the foreign ministers of the
countries participating in the military coalition.
He also warned that Syrians besieged by the Islamic State and
others besieged by forces loyal to President Bashar al-Assad are suffering, and
additional civilian deaths “will only push them further into a spiral of
despair and, more importantly, will prove to be a recruitment tool for
terrorist organizations.”
In a statement, a United States military spokesman, Col.
Christopher Garver of the Army, said that the American-led coalition forces had
conducted airstrikes near Manbij recently, and that the Pentagon was aware of
reports of civilian casualties.
“As with any allegation we receive, we will review any
information we have about the incident, including information provided by third
parties,” Colonel Garver said in the statement. He also said that if it turns
out that coalition operations have endangered civilians, “we will then
determine the next appropriate step.”
The state-run Syrian Arab News Agency had reported on Tuesday
that the airstrikes that killed civilians in Manbij may have been carried out
by French forces participating in the coalition, and the Syrian Foreign
Ministry called on the United Nations secretary general and the Security
Council to condemn the coalition strikes.
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