A US-backed offensive to retake the Islamic State-held northern Syrian city of Manbij has displaced some 20,000 civilians and could uproot about 216,000 more if it continues, a U.N. humanitarian agency said on Monday.
The report by the Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA) said it was possible people would "face impediments" to moving out of IS-controlled areas and they had a critical need for shelter, drinking water, food and health care.
Civilians
were mainly moving north towards nearby towns and to the Jarablous
border crossing with Turkey or west towards areas held by other rebel
groups, while lesser numbers had gone south to villages along the
Euphrates River.
OCHA said newly uprooted people
might try to head towards Al-Bab or Azaz, two towns west of Manbij, or
south to the Maskanah plain close to Lake Assad.
Offensives
aimed at rolling back Islamic State insurgents around Tabqa could also
trigger displacement, OCHA said. Tabqa, close to the Euphrates Dam at
the other end of Lake Assad from Manbij, is the apparent target of a
Russian-backed offensive by Syrian pro-government forces.
The OCHA report gave no figures or details of potential displacement caused by that battle.
Both
the U.S.- and Russian-backed assaults appear to threaten the Islamic
State stronghold of Raqqa, its capital in Syria, and both began last
week shortly after the Iraqi army attempted to storm IS-held Falluja in
Iraq.
A spokesman for U.S.-backed forces said on
Monday IS militants had been fleeing Manbij with their families as the
Syria Democratic Forces advanced to within 6 km (4 miles) in an attack
that has killed more than 150 jihadists.
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