International News

Syria force halts push on IS-held dam for repairs

BEIRUT, (MILLAT/APP/AFP) – US-backed Syrian fighters
on Monday paused their offensive on a key dam held by the Islamic State group to allow a technical team to enter the complex, a spokeswoman said.
There have been fears about the integrity of the dam after fighting
in the area forced it out of service on Sunday, following earlier UN warnings that a collapse would be “catastrophic”.
With air support from the US-led coalition against IS, the Syrian
Democratic Forces are fighting to seize the town of Tabqa and the adjacent dam on the Euphrates River, as part of their battle for the jihadists’ stronghold in nearby Raqa.
“To ensure the integrity of the Tabqa dam… we have decided to stop
operations for four hours beginning at 1:00 pm (1100 GMT),” SDF spokeswoman
Jihan Sheikh Ahmed said in a statement.
“This is to allow a team of engineers to enter the dam and carry out
their work.”
Ahmed said the pause could be extended if necessary.
The IS-held structure was forced out of service on Sunday after its
power station was damaged, a source there told AFP.
The United Nations has warned that damage to the dam “could lead to
massive scale flooding across Raqa and as far away as Deir Ezzor” province downstream to the southeast with “catastrophic humanitarian implications”.
The source at the dam told AFP on Monday that a technical team “will
assess the level of damage and repair that is needed so that the dam can resume its operations, after it was put out of service yesterday”.
“If fixing the damage will require more time, then we will coordinate
with the SDF to request additional time to finish repairs, resume the dam’s work and remove any threat to it,” the source added.
IS issued warnings through its propaganda agency Amaq on Sunday that
the dam could collapse “at any moment”.
The US-led coalition said on Monday it was “taking every precaution”
to ensure the structure’s integrity.
“To our knowledge, the dam has not been structurally damaged,” it
said in an online statement alongside satellite images of the dam.
The SDF had also denied the dam was damaged, and said military
operations around it were being conducted “slowly and with precision”.
The alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters launched its offensive for
Raqa city in November, seizing around two thirds of the surrounding province, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
At their closest point, they are just eight kilometres (five miles)
from the city, to the northeast.
But they are mostly further away, between 18 and 29 kilometres from
Raqa.