IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi ‘killed in Syria’

Authored by news.com.au and submitted by FowelBallz
image for IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi ‘killed in Syria’

Image SYRIA: Kurdish Forces Enter IS Controlled Raqqa June 09 2:08 Fighters from the Syrian Democratic Forces clashed with the Islamic State as they pushed into Raqqa from the north, east and west. Reuters reported that the US-backed coalition had made gains in the al-Mishlab and al-Sabahia districts of the de-facto capital of the Islamic State on Friday. These videos show fighters from the the Kurdish YPG faction in the al-Mishlab quarter of Raqqa. Credit: YPG Press Office via Storyful

Staff writers News Corp Australia Network

UNVERIFIED reports from Syrian state run TV claim that the leader of Islamic State Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi has been killed in an air strike in the country.

The IS stronghold of Raqqa was bombed heavily overnight on Saturday, local time, with the terrorist group’s Amaq news agency revealing the damage.

In July 2014 Bakr al-Baghdadi, proclaimed a “caliphate” that covered territory in both Iraq and Syria.

False claims of his death have previously been reported.

Raqqa became a key city in IS’s self-declared caliphate, a hub for the organisation’s activities and attacks in Syria, Iraq and further afield.

IS took over all levels of civil administration, rewriting school curriculums, establishing Islamic courts and creating police units to implement Islamic law.

In April a documentary claimed the world’s most wanted man, who has a bounty of A$34 million on his head, avoided capture by Iraqi special forces “by minutes” after escaping through a trapdoor.

That revelation came just days after al-Baghdadi’s deputy Ayad al-Jumaili was killed in an air strike.

In March US and Iraq authorities believed al-Baghdadi had abandoned his fighters and gone into hiding as Iraqi forces continued to make inroads into Mosul,

Raqqa also became the scene of some of IS’s worst atrocities, including gruesome executions, public displays of bodies and sex trafficking.

The city has long been seen as a prize by multiple parties to the Syrian conflict, including the government, Russia, Turkey and the US-led coalition bombing IS since 2014.

On November 5 last year, the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), a US-backed Arab-Kurdish alliance, launched a major offensive dubbed “Wrath of the Euphrates” to take Raqqa.

An estimated 300,000 civilians were believed to have been living under IS rule in Raqqa, including 80,000 who fled there from other parts of the country.

But as the SDF drew closer to the city, thousands were smuggled out to territory newly captured by the US-backed fighters.

After a string of victories in the surrounding province, including the key town of Tabqa and the adjacent dam, the SDF has sealed off the approaches to Raqqa city from the north, east and west.

On Tuesday, the SDF said its forces entered the city from the eastern district of Al-Meshleb.

The US-led coalition has been backing the SDF with air strikes, equipment and special forces advisers.

On Monday, a coalition bombing raid killed 21 civilians as they tried to escape Raqqa by dinghy on the Euphrates River, a route also used by IS fighters, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

Dustmitefaeces on June 11st, 2017 at 04:07 UTC »

This fella dies every week honestly

mrsuns10 on June 11st, 2017 at 03:47 UTC »

the ISIS version of Kenny

SoTiredOfWinning on June 11st, 2017 at 03:41 UTC »

Can't wait for the article to follow this up saying "oh nvm we found him again".