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Residents extinguish a fire caused by what activists say was an air strike by regime forces on the Tal Abyad street market in central Raqqa yesterday. The strikes also hit a building used as an Islamic court, and offices for Isil. Image Credit: Reuters

Beirut: Syrian war planes hit a bakery run by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) in the city of Raqqa, killing at least 17 people, in air raids on Saturday that also hit a major training camp used by the group for a second day running, a group monitoring the war said.

The air strikes on Raqqa, Isil’s stronghold some 400km northeast of Damascus, also hit a building used as an Islamic court, and another of the group’s offices, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

Quoting activists on the ground, Rami Abdul Rahman, founder of the Observatory, said the bakery was run by the militant group. He said those killed included at least eight civilians and an unknown number of Isil activists.

Isil, which has seized swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria, drove the last Syrian government forces out of Raqqa province in late August when its fighters seized an air base, capturing and later executing scores of Syrian soldiers.

Raqqa is the main Syrian foothold of Isil, where it provides electricity and water, pays salaries, controls traffic, and runs nearly everything from bakeries and banks to schools, courts and mosques.

The United States is assembling an alliance to fight the group in neighbouring Iraq. US President Barack Obama said on Friday key Nato allies stood ready to join the US in military action to defeat the group in Iraq.

The Syrian government has said it should be a partner in the fight against Isil. But Western states that have backed the uprising against President Bashar Al Assad have dismissed the idea of cooperating with Damascus and describe Al Assad as part of the problem.