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WAR REPORT
Jihadists lock down Syria's Raqa, send in arms: activists
by Staff Writers
Beirut (AFP) June 30, 2014


Jordan urges world help to face regional turmoil
Amman (AFP) June 30, 2014 - Jordan's King Abdullah II on Monday appealed for international support to help his country deal with regional turmoil after jihadists in neighbouring Iraq and Syria declared an "Islamic caliphate".

"It is important that the international community continue to support Jordan to deal challenges and developments in the region," a palace statement quoted the king as telling a Japanese parliamentarily delegation.

A Sunni militant offensive spearheaded by the Sunni jihadists in Iraq has sparked fears in Amman that they will take their fight to the kingdom.

The militants, previously known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), on Sunday declared a "caliphate", or Islamist state, straddling parts of Iraq and Syria.

Renaming themselves the Islamic State (IS), they already control large swathes of territory in northern and eastern Syria, and this month captured vast stretches of land in northern and western Iraq.

Warning against "repercussions of the crisis for Iraq and the entire region," the Jordanian king called for "a political solution that would include all segments of the Iraqi people," according to the palace.

His remarks came a day after Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu asked the international community on Sunday to support Jordan in the fight against "Islamic extremism".

"I think it's our common interest to make sure that a moderate, stable regime like (Jordan) is able to defend itself," said Netanyahu, whose country has a 1994 peace treaty with Jordan.

Already suffering from the impact of hosting more than 600,000 Syrian refugees, Jordan has long faced the challenge of dealing with its own jihadists, many of whom have joined jihadists or Al-Qaeda-linked groups in neighbouring Iraq and Syria.

Activists in Raqa, a stronghold of the Islamic State (IS), said Monday the jihadists have locked down the Syrian city and are shipping in new weapons, including missiles from Iraq.

"All roads leading in and out of Raqa city have been closed. Nobody can enter or leave Raqa at all right now," said Hadi Salameh, speaking to AFP via the Internet.

"They also brought in surface-to-surface missiles," said the activist, using a pseudonym to protect his identity.

An image sent to AFP by the activist showed a large missile mounted on the back of a military vehicle in the north Syrian city, in broad daylight.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights also reported the influx of arms.

Its director Rami Abdel Rahman said: "The Islamic State is bringing in heavy weapons from Iraq to Raqa every day. The group has all the trappings of a state except an air force."

Another activist in Raqa, Abu Ibrahim, posted pictures on Facebook showing missiles, and claimed the group was parading heavy machineguns as well as tanks, armoured vehicles, US-made Humvees and artillery cannons.

The reports come a day after the jihadist group announced the establishment of a "caliphate" led by its shadowy chief Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, referred to as "caliph Ibrahim".

A caliphate is an Islamic system of rule that became obsolete with the fall of the Ottoman empire nearly 100 years ago.

On Monday, the second day of the Muslim fasting month of Ramadan, the group "detained three young men, accusing them of not observing the fast", the Observatory said.

The extremist group was once welcome in Syria by some rebels seeking President Bashar al-Assad's ouster, but its systematic abuses and its quest for domination turned the opposition against it.

The group has been fighting Syria's rebels, including other Islamists, since January, but has retained control of Raqa as well as large swathes of Deir Ezzor near Iraq and parts of Aleppo province in the north.

Despite its overall unpopularity among Syrians, it has maintained a firm grip in areas under its control.

A recent offensive in Iraq spearheaded by IS saw the group capturing heavy weapons seized from fleeing Iraqi government troops.

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