US-backed fighters have surrounded a key jihadist-held town in northern Syria, a monitor said today, as they press their assault towards the Islamic State group's bastion of Raqa.
The Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have sealed off the last route leading out of IS-held Tabqa, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
"Tabqa is now surrounded, and IS will now have to use either tunnels or the Euphrates River to move around," said Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman.
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By today, the SDF had also seized the village of Safsafah, about six kilometres east of Tabqa, according to the Observatory and an SDF statement.
"We have liberated Safsafah after 38 hours of consecutive fighting," a statement by the SDF's "Wrath of the Euphrates" campaign said.
"We are still clearing the town," it added.
The battle for Tabqa is part of the SDF's flagship campaign for Raqa, the Syrian heart of IS's so-called caliphate, about 55 kilometres to the east.
At their closest point, they are just eight kilometres from Raqa city.
IS is under pressure on several fronts, with government forces attacking it elsewhere in Syria and a US-backed offensive on its Iraqi stronghold of Mosul.
In Syria, it still controls territory in the oil-rich eastern province of Deir Ezzor, where the Observatory said IS jihadists had killed at least 33 people execution-style near the town of Mayadeen.
"They were all between the ages of 18 and 25," the monitor said, but it was unclear what they had been accused of.
"The mass killing took place on the edge of a ditch that was dug by IS," the Observatory added.
The SDF launched its offensive for Raqa in November and has since captured most of the surrounding northern province.
The Pentagon is arming and training the SDF, but questions remain over how much support the United States should give the Kurdish component of the alliance given concerns from Turkey, which views the Kurdish fighters as "terrorists".
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