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This frame grab from video released on Sunday, Oct. 15, 2017 and provided by Furat FM, a Syrian Kurdish activist-run media group, shows surrendered Syrian Islamic State fighters gather at a base of the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), in Raqqa, Syria. Image Credit: AP

Raqqa: US-backed militias battled foreign fighters defending the last pocket of Daesh’s one-time Syrian capital of Raqqa on Monday, bringing their four-month campaign for the city to the brink of victory.

A Reuters correspondent saw smoke rising above the city and heard machinegun and mortar fire, but said the rate of air strikes had lessened from other visits to Raqqa in recent weeks.

A field commander of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) alliance of Kurdish and Arab militias in Raqqa said he expected the operation to end on Monday, but the US-led coalition said it could not put a timeline on the battle.

A convoy of Syrian Daesh fighters left the city on Saturday night with their families, leaving only 200-300 foreign militants to mount a last stand, the SDF said on Sunday.

The SDF is now poised to end Daesh’s vicious rule over a city where it paraded its string of lightning victories in 2014, and from which it plotted attacks on civilian targets across the West.

Its defeat in Raqqa mirrors its collapse across Iraq and Syria, where its enemies have driven it from cities, killed its leaders in air strikes and regained the oil fields that funded its so-called caliphate.

It lost Mosul, its largest city and most prized possession after months of fighting in July.

The group, which at its height ruled millions of people in both countries, is in Syria now forced back into a strip of the Euphrates valley south of Deir Al Zor and areas of desert on each side.

“We have conducted some strikes in the last 24 hours, but I suspect that that will pick up here very soon with the SDF advancing into the final remaining areas of the city,” said Colonel Ryan Dillon, spokesman for the US-led coalition.

The coalition has supported the SDF with air power and special forces throughout its Raqqa campaign, which began in November with a months-long offensive to isolate the city.

The battle inside Raqqa started in June, and the intense air strikes and street-to-street fighting drove many of its people to refugee camps and left much of the city a mess of concrete debris.

The field commander in Raqqa described Monday’s fighting as “a clearing operation” and said he expected it to be completed by the end of the day with the SDF controlling the whole city.

Ilham Ahmad, a senior politician in the SDF, said she expected the end of the campaign to be declared “within hours or days”, but Dillon said he could not put a timeline on the operation.

A Reuters correspondent was with an SDF sniper unit on a frontline facing the hospital complex that represents one of Daesh’s last strongholds in the city, and saw two men in camouflage clothing climb a building and raise a flag.

Cars in the streets below had loudspeakers mounted on their roofs broadcasting messages to the last Daesh fighters telling them they would not be ill-treated if they surrendered.

Another SDF field commander, who gave his name as Ashraf Serhad, said he had heard that 250 Daesh fighters remained and that on Sunday he had seen several minivans and buses leave the hospital carrying some who had surrendered.

Saturday night’s convoy out of Raqqa included about 100 Daesh fighters and nearly 200 family members, said Omar Alloush, a member of the Raqqa Civil Council set up by the SDF to run the city.

The fighters who left in the convoy are being held by security forces before interrogation and may be tried in court, he added.

The strongest group in the SDF is the YPG, a Kurdish militia that Turkey regards as an extension of the PKK, which has waged an insurgency against Ankara for three decades.

Its influence across swathes of northern Syria, including in majority Arab areas, and its backing by the US, has provoked disquiet in Turkey.

The US-backed campaign against Daesh has pushed it from most of northern Syria, while a rival offensive by the Syrian army, backed by Russia, Iran and Shiite militias, has driven the militants from the central desert.

Daesh retreated from the countryside around Raqqa months ago and its last big area of territory is shrinking rapidly along the Euphrates valley downstream of Deir Al Zor, and in the desert on either side.

As the militant group became better entrenched in Syria and Iraq, Raqqa became its most important centre, one it used as a planning and operations hub.

Many of its leaders were at times based there, and former hostages said Mohammad Emwazi, better known as Jihadi John, imprisoned them along with those he later executed in a building near the city.

The group killed dozens of captured Syrian soldiers there in July 2014 and made the city the site of a slave market for Yazidi women captured in Iraq and given to fighters.

The coalition has said Raqqa was a hub for attacks abroad, and in November 2015, after militants killed more than 130 people in Paris, France launched air strikes on Daesh targets in the city.

But as the group defends its last patch of bomb-cratered ground in the city, the cost of the battle lies evident all around. Much of Raqqa lies ruined, hundreds of civilians have been killed, and thousands more have fled.