It took Ahmed Brazu and his family 20 terrifying hours to escape this ravaged city, the capital of the militant Islamic State (IS) group’s imagined caliphate that has become an increasingly perilous battlefield.
The US-backed forces closing in on the militant stronghold had urged fleeing civilians to avoid Islamic State positions. But those instructions proved useless; the family hid in a mosque, only to come under fire from the militants’ rocket-propelled grenades. The danger came from the city’s would-be liberators, too: Brazu’s brother and a niece were killed in a US-led coalition airstrike a few days before he fled.
“The bombing was nonstop. We were terrified,” said Brazu, who was sitting in the back of a pickup truck with nearly two dozen relatives: exhausted and covered in dust but clear of the city at last.
A photographer’s journey into the dying centre of the militant Islamic State group
Under the IS control for more than three years, Raqqa has been a symbol of the extremist group’s lofty ambitions, the home to many of its leaders and the site of atrocities — including the murders of journalists — that helped galvanise the coalition in the fight.
The forces seized the final route into Raqqa last week as they pushed into the city. Several hundred US Special Operations forces are advising them, and an unknown number of American support personnel — including Marine howitzer gunners and a detachment of troops operating a nearby airfield — are all in the area.