Free Syrian Army captures symbolic Dabiq from Daesh

Free Syrian Army captures symbolic Dabiq from Daesh
Fighters from the Free Syrian Army cheer and react as they fight against the Daesg group on the outskirts of the northern Syrian town of Dabiq on Saturday. The Turkish-backed fighters captured Dabiq with little resistance early Sunday. (AFP/Nazeer al-Khatib)
Updated 16 October 2016
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Free Syrian Army captures symbolic Dabiq from Daesh

Free Syrian Army captures symbolic Dabiq from Daesh
BEIRUT, Lebanon: Turkish-backed Syrian opposition forces have captured the symbolically significant town of Dabiq from the Daesh group, the factions said Sunday morning.
A commander of the Syrian opposition Hamza Brigade said Daesh fighters put up “minimal” resistance to defend the northern Syrian town before withdrawing in the direction of the much larger Daesh-held town of Al-Bab to the south.
Saif Abu Bakr said some 2,000 opposition fighters pushed into Dabiq with tank and artillery support from the Turkish army. The commander said the extremists left the town heavily mined.
Both Turkish and international coalition warplanes conducted airstrikes on Dabiq and nearby Arshak, the Turkish state-run Anadolu news agency reported.
The Daesh group took control of the town, which had a prewar population of about 3,000 people, in August 2014. The group’s propaganda had boasted of the fight for the northern Syrian town, citing Islamic lore that it would be the scene of a major battle between crusaders and army of the Muslim caliphate that would herald Doomsday. The group’s English language magazine, Dabiq, is named after the town, and in 2014 they said they had buried the American captive Peter Abdul-Rahman Kassig there.
The Turkish military intervened in the Syrian war in August this year under orders from Ankara to clear the border area from the Daesh group and from US-backed Syrian Kurdish forces linked Turkey’s own outlawed Kurdish insurgency. The Turkish government describes both groups as terrorists.
Syrian opposition forces backed by Turkish ground and air forces have since expelled Daesh militants from their last positions along the Syrian-Turkish frontier and are closing in on Al-Bab, one of the last remaining Daesh strongholds in Syria’s contested Aleppo province.
Turkey has bused thousands of opposition fighters from other fronts in northern Syria to the frontier as part of operation “Euphrates Shield,” named after the vital river that runs through the region.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights group, which monitors the conflict through a network of local contacts, said the extremist group had sent over 1,000 fighters to defend Dabiq last week before withdrawing hurriedly.