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TERROR WARS
Syria regime penetrates IS-held eastern province: monitor
by Staff Writers
Beirut (AFP) June 23, 2017


Coalition forces kill IS financier in Syria
Washington (AFP) June 23, 2017 - The US-led coalition has killed an Islamic State financial facilitator in an air strike in Syria, officials said Friday.

Fawaz Muhammad Jubayr al-Rawi was killed in the June 16 strike in Albu Kamal in eastern Syria, the coalition said in a statement.

Rawi was a Syrian native and an "experienced terrorist financial facilitator" who had moved millions of dollars for the jihadists.

He owned a currency exchange in Albu Kamal, "which he used along with a network of global financial contacts to move money into and out of ISIS-controlled territory and across borders," the statement read, using an alternate acronym for IS.

Albu Kamal sits on the border between Iraq and Syria and has also regularly been targeted in air strikes.

The US Department of the Treasury imposed sanctions on al-Rawi and his company in December.

Syrian regime forces on Friday broke into the eastern Deir Ezzor province for the first time since 2014, a monitor said, after seizing territory from Islamic State group jihadists.

Government forces control part of Deir Ezzor city and the adjacent military airport, but IS holds the vast desert province and most of the provincial capital.

"Backed by Iranian, Lebanese and Iraqi fighters, the Syrian army entered Deir Ezzor province from the southeast, near the Iraqi border," said Rami Abdel Rahman, who heads the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

He said the pro-government forces had advanced eight kilometres (five miles) into the province.

They are now just 12 kilometres (less than eight miles) from the key T2 oil pump, which lies on a pipeline extending from Iraq through central Syria to its western coastline.

Syria's desert, known as the "Badiya", extends over 90,000 square kilometres (35,000 square miles) from central Syria to the borders with Iraq and Jordan to the east and southeast.

Much of the Badiya has been held by IS, but Syria's army has been chipping away at it for months.

In addition to capturing key oil fields and infrastructure, government forces are keen to break IS's stranglehold on regime-held districts of Deir Ezzor city.

An estimated 100,000 civilians are living under IS siege.

Earlier this month, Syrian government forces reached the eastern border with Iraq for the first time since 2015.

By Friday, according to the Observatory, army troops were in control of an 85-kilometre (53-mile) stretch of the frontier.

The government's advance has created tensions along the border, where US-led coalition forces are using a garrison to train anti-IS fighters.

On June 8, a US warplane shot down a drone after it dropped munitions near At-Tanaf, after other incidents where the coalition fired on pro-regime forces on the ground as they approached the garrison.

And last Sunday, a US fighter jet downed a Syrian government warplane in the country's north for the first time in the six-year conflict.

More than 320,000 people have been killed in Syria since the conflict began with anti-government protests in March 2011 before turning into a complex war involving regional and international players.

TERROR WARS
Two dead as suspected jihadists attack Mali tourist resort
Bamako (AFP) June 19, 2017
Suspected jihadists crying "Allahu Akbar" stormed a tourist resort popular with foreigners on the edge of the Malian capital Bamako on Sunday, briefly seizing more than 30 hostages and leaving at least two people dead. The assault on the Kangaba Le Campement resort comes after a similar strike less than two years ago on a luxury hotel in Bamako, which lies in the south of the troubled countr ... read more

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