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Islamic State's 'caliphate' in Syria, Iraq Beirut, April 21 (AFP) Apr 21, 2019 Ousted a month ago from the territory it controlled across Iraq and Syria, Islamic State jihadists remain scattered in the Syrian desert and still carry out attacks. Here is a recap of the key events since the jihadists declared their "caliphate" in June 2014 to the announcement of its final defeat on March 23, 2019 by a US-backed Kurdish-Arab alliance.
In Syria, ISIL had in January seized the northern city of Raqa from rebels. It also controls a large part of the eastern province of Deir Ezzor, on the border with Iraq, as well as positions in the northern province of Aleppo. In Iraq, ISIL in June seizes Mosul and Sunni Arab areas bordering the autonomous Kurdistan region in the north. A badly prepared Iraqi army is routed without a fight. Raqa and Mosul become the IS's two de-facto capitals. In July, Baghdadi appears in a video posted on jihadist websites and calls on all Muslims everywhere to "obey" him.
Some of the atrocities are broadcast on video, which the jihadists use as a propaganda tool. In Iraq, the group seizes the historic home of the Yazidi minority in Sinjar region, turning children into soldiers and using thousands of women as sex slaves.
Washington then forms a coalition of more than 70 countries to fight the group in both Iraq and Syria. Washington deploys 5,000 soldiers.
In August 2016, the US-backed Kurdish-Arab alliance known as the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) recaptures Manbij in Aleppo province. Backed by Turkish tanks and air force, rebels retake Jarabulus, and then, in February 2017, Al-Bab, the last IS bastion in Aleppo province. In March 2017, Syrian troops backed by Russian jets recapture the ancient desert town of Palmyra. The oasis city had traded hands several times during the war and become a symbol of the jihadists' destruction of priceless cultural heritage in areas under their control. In October 2017, the SDF announces the full recapture of Raqa city, capital of the eponymous province. In September 2018, the coalition launches an offensive against IS pockets in Deir Ezzor province. On March 23, 2019, the SDF announces the death of the "caliphate" after seizing total control of the last IS outpost in the village of Baghouz neighbouring Iraq.
In November, coalition-backed Kurdish forces retake Sinjar. In 2016, Anbar provincial capital Ramadi is recaptured and Iraqi forces retake Fallujah. In July 2017, then Iraqi prime minister Haider al-Abadi declares victory in Mosul after a nearly nine-month offensive led by a federal force backed by coalition air strikes. In August, the last major IS urban stronghold in northern Iraq, Tal Afar, is declared "liberated", as is the whole of Nineveh province. On December 9, Abadi declares victory in Iraq's three-year war against the IS.
In January 2018, a double suicide bombing leaves more than 30 dead in Baghdad. In Syria in January 2019, a routine US patrol is targeted by a IS suicide bomber at Manbij, killing 19 people including four Americans. Several days later in northeastern Hasakeh province, five people are killed when a US-SDF convoy is attacked by a suicide bomber. And in the deadliest attacks since the fall of its "caliphate", the jihadists kill more than 60 pro-regime fighters in a 48-hour period, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights says on April 20.
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