Syrian army ousts IS from all of Hama

Update: 2017-10-04 16:58 GMT

Beirut: The Syrian army and allied fighters drove the Islamic State group from their last positions in the central province of Hama on Wednesday after heavy fighting, a monitor said. 

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitor of the war, said IS was no longer present anywhere in the province for the first time in three years.
The army, backed by ally Russia, launched a campaign against IS in Hama in early September, capturing some 50 villages and the strategic town of Uqayribat, the Observatory said.
"Today, regime forces managed to take control of all the last remaining villages in the hands of Daesh
(IS) in eastern Hama province after more than a month of fierce clashes between the two sides," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said. 
The monitor said more than 400 IS fighters and nearly 190 Syrian soldiers and allied militiamen had been killed in the fighting.
There was no immediate announcement in Syrian state media, but the Al-Watan newspaper, which is close to the government, reported that "the army has taken complete control of eastern Hama province." 
"Daesh is no longer present in Hama province," it added.
The government holds large parts of Hama province, and all of the provincial capital.
But jihadists and other rebels hold pockets of territory in the northeast and south. 
IS's loss of Hama province comes after they were forced in June to withdraw from their last positions in Aleppo province further north.
The jihadist group is also facing multiple offensives elsewhere in the country. 

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