Beirut: US-backed forces battling IS near the Turkish border in northern Syria said on Friday they had launched a final assault to flush the remaining militants out of the city of Manbij.
The Syria Democratic Forces (SDF), with air support from a US-led coalition, said last week they had taken almost complete control of Manbij, where a small number of IS militants have been holed up.
Friday's attack is "the last operation and the last assault," said Sharfan Darwish, a spokesman for the Syrian Arab and Kurdish forces.
Darwish said roughly 100 IS militants were left in the centre of the city, and that they were using civilians as human shields. Several civilians were killed trying to flee, he said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors Syria's five-year conflict, said around 500 cars had left Manbij carrying IS members and civilians. They are heading northeast towards Jarablus, a town under IS control on the Turkish border, the Observatory said.
The convoy carried the final IS members leaving the city, under an agreement between the fighting parties that would not be announced officially, the Observatory said.
The SDF could not immediately be reached for comment.
The SDF's offensive, which began at the end of May, quickly captured the countryside surrounding Manbij, but slowed once fighting entered the city. The SDF said it had been avoiding a large-scale assault inside Manbij out of concern for civilians.
Dozens of people were killed in suspected US coalition air strikes last month, residents and monitors said.
The campaign aims to flush IS out of areas it controls along the Turkish border, which was for years a route through which the group moved fighters and weapons.