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Residents of Hisha return to their town after the Syrian Democratic Forces took control of the area from Daesh in the northern Raqqa countryside of Syria on Monday. Image Credit: Reuters

Beirut: Internet cafes closed down, travel bans imposed and new checkpoints erected: residents say terrorists are trying to tighten their grip on power in Raqqa as US-backed forces near Daesh’s Syrian bastion.

A Kurdish-Arab alliance called the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) began an operation to recapture the northern city on November 5.

Since then, residents say Daesh has tried to seal its stronghold off from the outside world, imposing a media blackout on the city’s population of more than 300,000.

The flow of information into and out of Raqqa had already been restricted since January 2014, when Daesh seized the city from rebels who had captured it from regime forces in March 2013.

Since the terrorist group took over the provincial capital, only a handful of outsiders have been able to maintain contact with Raqqa residents.

They include Britain-based monitor the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and activist group Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently (RBSS).

RBSS formed secretly in April 2014 to show the world what was happening inside the city, and has documented life there despite a terrifying backlash from Daesh, which has murdered its activists in Raqqa and even in Turkey.

Through RBSS, AFP made contact with several people still inside Raqqa, who spoke under pseudonyms and described an atmosphere of growing paranoia among the city’s terrorist rulers.

Moussa, 31, said Daesh was carefully controlling access to news on the US-backed campaign to oust the terrorist group from Raqqa.

“Because of the heavy restrictions imposed by Daesh on the internet and satellite dishes, it’s very difficult to find out what’s happening in the battle for Raqqa,” Moussa said.

“We rely on what we’re told by people who do manage to follow the news online — but that is very difficult to do, and very dangerous.”

It is risky to even discuss the battle, he said.

Daesh only allows “rumours that they are advancing and inflicting losses on the other side, who will fail to enter Raqqa, as they put it”, said Moussa.

Any discussion of Daesh losses could result in arrest and even execution by the terrorists, he said.

Daesh has long restricted access to the internet in territory under its control, banning private routers and allowing only a handful of internet cafes to function under close surveillance.

Residents say even permitted cafes are frequently raided to prevent customers accessing banned content.

Since the SDF assault began, Daesh has closed several internet cafes in the city and erected new checkpoints, 22-year-old activist Ahmad said.

“I go online now and then and surf on certain pages — but very, very carefully because of the restrictions Daesh puts on internet cafes,” he said.

Meanwhile, Daesh produces a steady stream of victorious propaganda, saying “they are killing and blowing up the Kurds”.

Daesh has imposed an extreme interpretation of Islam on Raqqa, executing those who break the group’s rules.

The terrorists’s de facto Syrian capital has been the scene of some of the group’s most horrifying acts of violence, as well as a hub for foreign fighters it has attracted from around the world.

Residents have long been prevented from leaving Raqqa without Daesh permission, but in recent months it has become impossible, said Abu Mohammad, another activist with RBSS who spoke from outside the city.

Abu Mohammad said many residents want to flee.

“But if their plans are discovered, they are arrested and their money is confiscated, and the smugglers trying to help them will be executed,” he said.

He described two families who recently tried to escape with their children, terrified of intensifying US-led coalition air strikes and the terrorists’ growing paranoia, but were captured shortly after leaving.

The men were imprisoned and the families’s money and identity documents were confiscated, he said.

Analysts say the fight for Raqqa is likely to be long and complicated.

The SDF says it will involve two phases: the first to besiege the city, and the second to enter and recapture it.

But tensions over which forces will lead the final battle and the risk of civilian casualties are likely to hinder progress.

Moussa said he was waiting impatiently to be rid of Daesh’s “occupation”.

“Liberation is the dream of all the free people of Raqqa,” he said.