Daesh security leader seized in Syria

US-backed forces said Friday they had captured a leader of
Daesh in eastern Syria where the Kurdish-led fighters have been battling the
extremists.
A statement by the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) identified
the suspect as Osama Oweid Saleh and described him as “one of the most
dangerous terrorists of the Daesh group.”
But Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Britain-based Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights war monitor, disputed the claim.
Abdel Rahman said Saleh was merely “a former local security
official” in the eastern Deir Ezzor province.
In its statement the SDF said that Saleh “was a security
official for the terrorists in Deir Ezzor and took an active part in planning
and implementing more than 40 terrorist operations” for the extremist group.
It also said that he was “a security official” in other
parts of Syria for Daesh, including in the former extremist bastion of Raqqa.
Saleh, it said, was ambushed by SDF fighters and captured on
November 22 in the Deir Ezzor countryside.
Abdel Rahman told AFP that Saleh “could be a member of an
Daesh sleeper cell.”
The SDF, an alliance of Kurdish and Arab fighters, is
seeking to expel Daesh from a pocket of land in the Deir Ezzor province near
the Iraq border.
The Kurdish-led forces have spearheaded the US-backed fight
against Daesh in Syria.
On Monday the Observatory reported that the SDF suffered
record fatalities in an assault by Daesh as holdout extremists kept up a fierce
defense of their last Syrian redoubt.
It said a total of more than 200 people have been killed
since around 500 Daesh fighters burst out of the fog shrouding the area in
eastern Syria near the border with Iraq to launch their deadly assault last
Friday.
Ninety-two of the dead were SDF fighters while at least 61
extremists and 51 civilians, mostly their relatives, also died in the violence,
it said.