Syrians give ISIS 48 hours to flee

Exit encircled town or face death, U.S.-backed fighters say

BEIRUT -- U.S.-backed Syrian fighters on Thursday gave Islamic State militants 48 hours to leave an encircled city near the Turkish border without a fight, a last-ditch effort to protect civilian lives, according to a statement issued by the group.

The Manbij Military Council, which is part of the U.S.-supported Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, said the initiative represents the "only and last" opportunity for Islamic State militants to "leave the town alive."

Backed by U.S.-led coalition airstrikes, the Democratic Forces fighters have encircled Manbij and seized western parts of the Islamic State-held city but have so far avoided an all-out assault to minimize civilian casualties. However, airstrikes in the Manbij countryside blamed on the coalition have killed scores of civilians in the past few days, including children.

The statement accused the Islamic State of using civilians as human shields and said it would allow the militants a last opportunity to leave the city with their "individual weapons" to a location of their choice. Manbij is an Islamic State hub and lies on a key supply route to the extremist group's self-styled capital, Raqqa. If Manbij is captured by the U.S.-backed fighters, it will be the biggest strategic defeat for the Islamic State in Syria since July 2015, when the extremist group lost the border town of Tal Abyad.

The fighting around Manbij coincides with an uptick in fighting in the contested city of Aleppo, where government forces have encircled the eastern, rebel-held parts of the city, trapping hundreds of thousands of people inside.

Stephen O'Brien, the U.N.'s emergency relief coordinator, said he is "gravely alarmed" by developments in eastern Aleppo. "Food in east Aleppo is expected to run out by the middle of next month," he warned.

The head of delegation for the International Committee of the Red Cross in Syria described the situation as "devastating and overwhelming," with heavy and indiscriminate shelling and an "untold numbers of civilian casualties."

"The bombing is constant. The violence is threatening hundreds of thousands of people's lives, homes and livelihoods," said Marianne Gasser, according to a Red Cross statement. It said Gasser was in Aleppo.

Meanwhile, the U.N.'s children agency condemned the killing of children in Syria's civil war after attacks in the country's north.

In a statement distributed Thursday, UNICEF said dozens of children were among those killed in airstrikes in and around Manbij in the past few days.

The U.S.-led coalition has not commented on the accusations but has stepped up its airstrikes on the area, which is controlled by the Islamic State.

"No matter where they are in Syria or under whose control they live -- absolutely nothing justifies attacks on children," UNICEF said.

UNICEF also condemned the killing of a 12-year-old boy who was beheaded on-camera in Aleppo this week by a Syrian rebel group.

The Nour el-Din al-Zinki group, which has so far been known as a relatively moderate group that fights the Syrian government and the Islamic State group, called the killing of the Palestinian boy an "individual mistake" and said it will open an investigation into his death.

In Geneva, U.N. humanitarian aid adviser Jan Egeland appealed for 48-hour localized truces across Syria to allow in aid. He said the U.N. got authorization from the Syrian government to deliver aid to all 18 U.N.-designated besieged areas, but fighting is keeping them from making deliveries

"We are hopeful that intensive diplomatic activities will lead to access to eastern Aleppo," he said of the rebel-held part of the city.

Egeland also said there are "intensive discussions" underway about how to help some 100,000 people who have been stuck for weeks at the Syrian-Jordanian border. "We are hopeful that we will be able to supply them with food and other necessities soon, either from within Syria or from Jordan," he said.

Tens of thousands of people have been stuck in the area known as the "berm" for its earthen mounds, after Jordan closed the border when a car bombing last month killed seven Jordanian soldiers near the Rukban crossing point.

Doctors Without Borders on Thursday called for the evacuation of war-wounded Syrians through Jordan's sealed northern border. The international medical humanitarian organization said it has not treated any war-wounded Syrians in the emergency room in the Ramtha government hospital -- about 3 miles from the Syrian border -- since the closure of Jordan's northern border after the deadly June 21 suicide attack.

"The closure of the borders means that the most vulnerable victims of the conflict -- those badly injured by the war -- no longer have the chance to survive," said Luis Eguiluz, group's head of mission in Jordan.

Information for this article was contributed by Jamey Keaten and Edith M. Lederer of The Associated Press.

A Section on 07/22/2016

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