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Force hails 'historic' Raqa victory but handover on hold

Raqa: The Kurdish-led force that expelled the Islamic State group from Raqa hailed a "historic victory" today in the devastated city's stadium and vowed to hand over power to a civilian administration.
Three days after fully retaking the northern Syrian city that was considered the inner sanctum of IS's now moribund "caliphate", the Syrian Democratic Forces held an official ceremony.
The group however stopped short of transferring authority to the Raqa Civil Council because it said much ordnance disposal remained to be done before the city could be left in civilian hands.
SDF spokesman Talal Sello, speaking in front of a modest attendance of fighters and council members, said this week's victory against IS was dedicated to "all humanity".
For three years, Raqa saw some of IS's worst abuses and grew into one of its main governance hubs, a centre for both its potent propaganda machine and its unprecedented experiment in jihadist statehood.
After losing its major strongholds in Iraq and Syria one after the other, the "state" the jihadists proclaimed in 2014 has shrunk to barely a tenth of its original size and the loss of Raqa hammered yet another nail in its coffin.
At the ceremony held in the stadium where jihadists made their last stand in the city on Tuesday, Sello vowed the US- backed SDF would transfer power soon. "After the end of clearing operations... we will hand over the city to the Raqa Civil Council," he said.
He stressed the SDF would maintain its presence in the area and reiterated the Kurdish-Arab military alliance's support for a federal system in Syria, something the regime in Damascus has so far opposed.
France is the United States' key partner in the international coalition assisting local anti-IS forces and a spokesman in Paris today argued some jihadists remained in small pockets of the city. "The return of civilians to Raqa will not take place in any major way for many weeks, such is the quantity of explosive devices Daesh left behind," French military spokesman Patrik Steiger said, using the Arabic acronym for IS.
Raqa was heavily damaged during the more than four-month battle, which the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said left more than 3,200 people dead, including 1,130 civilians.
Ahmed al-Ali, a 31-year-old member of the RCC's reconstruction committee, expressed his shock at discovering the extent of the destruction before the ceremony.
"Today (Friday) is the first time I've come to the city since its liberation," he told an AFP reporter. "I haven't managed to get to my house on Al-Qitar street.
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