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ISIS 'fire missiles at US-backed forces' in last stand as relatives of 'hardened' extremists flee from terror group's only Syrian stronghold


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 Dramatic footage has emerged purportedly showing ISIS fanatics firing anti-tank missiles at US-backed forces in a bloody defence of their last Syrian stronghold. 

The video, believed to have been captured in the terror group's last holdout in  Baghouz, near the Iraqi border, shows a guided weapon thudding into buildings.

It is thought to show a recent confrontation between the extremists and Syrian Democratic Forces, a Kurdish-led coalition backed by Washington.

The SDF has launched a final push this week to expel ISIS fanatics from the enclave. 

Thousands of people have fled Baghouz as the fighting rages, including women and children but also suspected jihadists.  

Today the Kurdish-led SDF were advancing slowly towards hundreds of jihadists, with both sides locked in heavy clashes.  

Footage shared online purportedly showed an ISIS fighter launching an anti-tank guided missile which spirals through the air before blowing up the top floor of a building. 

In another shot, a rocket destroys a wall with a missile, while a man shouts 'Allahu Akbar' - 'God is great'.  

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The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the US-backed fighters were making painstaking progress with mines scattered throughout the sector.  

Hundreds of people fled the IS holdout in the night of Tuesday to Wednesday, an SDF spokesman said. 

The SDF believes 400 to 600 jihadists may be holed up there, including foreigners and other hardened militants. 9770792-6700255-image-a-25_15500700282239770784-6700255-image-a-24_1550070015043

Men who had escaped were patted down and taken for retina scans.  

Since early December, more than 38,000 people, mostly wives and children of IS fighters, have fled into SDF-held areas, the Observatory said.

That figure includes around 3,400 suspected jihadists detained by the SDF, according to the monitor.  

'The bombing was unimaginable, we ran from one place to the other,' said Hala Hassan, 29, a woman from Syria's Deir al-Zor who escaped with her five children.

She said 'fighters from all nationalities' were in the enclave.

'There was no food. We ate grass from the ground like sheep... ISIS had blocked the roads and smugglers wanted thousands of dollars,' she said.  

The SDF launched a military offensive in September to expel ISIS from the oil-rich province of Deir Ezzor. 

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