Syrian civil war On 26 November 2012, during the
Syrian civil war, a main route from
Raqqa to
Aleppo passing through Tabqa along the
Euphrates was dotted with both government and
Syrian rebel checkpoints. On 11 February 2013,
Syrian opposition rebel groups including the
jihadist al-Qaeda-linked
al-Nusra Front and
Liwa Owais al-Qorani took over the city. On 21 November, there was fierce fighting between government troops and rebels in the town, but by 25 November, the rebels were back in control. In January 2014, The
Islamic State took control of the city. During ISIL rule, the town's
Catholic,
Antiochian Orthodox Church and
Assyrian Church of the East churches were turned into a parking garage, a weapons factory and a barn, with
ISIL militants destroying all Christian symbols on the three churches. The
Shia Al Zahraa' Mosque was destroyed and an
Ismaili place of worship was turned into a children's training centre. In addition, high ranking IS members would reside in the city, to escape the bombardments on its capital Raqqa. On 22 March 2017, the
Syrian Democratic Forces began the
Battle of Tabqa to retake the city, as the
international coalition assisted by conducting airstrikes.
SOHR reported that the airstrikes killed or injured more than 40 people, while the
BBC reported 27 killed and 40 wounded. On May 10, 2017, the SDF successfully recaptured the city, during which an estimated 40% of the buildings were either damaged or destroyed. == Demographics ==