11 killed in suspected ISIS attack on Syria truffle hunters

An attack by the Islamic State (ISIS) claimed the lives of at least 11 people who were hunting desert truffles in northern Syria on Sunday, according to a war monitor.

Between February and April each year, hundreds of impoverished Syrians risk their lives to forage for the delicacy in the vast Syrian desert, a known hideout for terrorists that is also littered with mines.

Desert truffles can fetch high prices in a country battered by 13 years of war and a crushing economic crisis.

“At least 11 people collecting truffles were killed when ISIS fighters detonated a bomb as their car passed in the desert of Raqqa province in northern Syria,” the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported.

After the blast, the attackers opened fire, the Observatory added.

Residents were still searching for missing persons, said the Britain-based monitoring group with a network of sources inside Syria, noting that the terrorists kidnapped three other hunters.

ISIS took control of large swathes of Syria in 2014. A military campaign backed by a United States-led coalition led to the group’s territorial defeat in March 2019 but remnants continue to hide in the desert and launch deadly attacks.

The global terrorist group’s reach spans beyond Syria, with ISIS claiming an attack Friday on a concert hall in the Russian capital, Moscow, that left 137 dead.

Earlier in March, 19 truffle collectors were killed in an area of Syria’s Raqqa, where ISIS extremists are present, when their vehicle hit a mine, the Observatory said at the time.