Press. voanews.com
“If you refuse to join, IS militants take you away by force,” said Ahmed
Ali, 29, a former farmer in Syria's northeastern countryside. “We don't
actually know where they take people. But they don't come back.” Surrounded by more than 20 other young men in
a sweltering tent, Ali described fleeing Islamic State militants three nights
earlier, paying a series of smugglers $1,000 to get him to the relative safety
of a camp in the town of Ain Issa.
A week ago, Islamic State fighters had hung fliers all over his village,
ordering all men from 20- to 30-years-old to join their ranks. Other men chimed
in, some saying militants were demanding service from men from 16 to 36 in
their villages. “I left my wife and my son behind,” said Ali. His family, like
all those remaining in his village, is poor and he could not afford to smuggle
them out. “Anyone with money left a long time ago.”
Brutal Last Days
Syrian government forces, as well as forces from a U.S.-led coalition of
Kurdish and Arab militias have been recapturing IS-held territory for months.
And as enemy forces close in on each IS area, the militants become their most
brutal, soldiers in Syria say.
Besides last-ditch attempts to gather forces, IS militants are attacking
with car bombs, sniper fire and mortars, said Matay Hanna, a soldier with the
MFS, a Christian brigade within the Syrian Democratic Forces, an umbrella group
of Kurdish and Arab fighting groups led by the Kurdish People's Protection
Units, or YPG.
Some militants in Raqqa, once the capital of the self-proclaimed
caliphate, come out of their strongholds fighting, in apparent attempts to
escape oncoming forces, Hanna said, kneeling behind a brick wall on the roof of
a building across the street from a suspected IS sniper point.
The militants “are suffering from sleep deprivation, lack of water and
lack of food,” he said. At the camp in
Ain Issa, about 55 kilometers (34 miles) from Raqqa, Ali and other displaced
Syrians also lack enough food, clean water and health care.
Deepening Crisis
Newly arrived families crowd into large, hot tents, sometimes
languishing for days before being placed in smaller, only slightly more
comfortable private tents. The United
Nations says nearly 225,000 people have fled their homes in the Raqqa
governorate in the past five months and half of the population of Syria is
displaced after more than six years of war. Before IS took over about three
years ago, rebel groups and al-Qaida-linked militants were battling in Omar's
village.
IS brought a certain level of political stability, but the militants
also brought extreme violence and poverty. With his father dead, and very few
resources, Omar, 24, said he had no choice but to remain at home to take care
of his mother and sister.
That was until he was told to fight for IS or face arrest and possibly
execution. Fleeing was a heartbreaking choice, Omar added, because IS is known
to arrest family members of individuals that escape their areas. “I don't know what happened to my family,” he
said. “They don't know what happened to me.”
https://www.voanews.com/a/fight-or-flee-families-scattered-in-syria-war/3994633.html