Al-Rai, Syria


Al-Rai, is a small town in northern Aleppo Governorate, northern Syria. With 4,609 inhabitants, as per the 2004 census, al-Rai is the administrative center of the sparsely populated Nahiya al-Rai. Located at the Baghdad Railway and close to the Turkish border, right across Elbeyli, it is however a strategically important village. The town of Akhtarin, some to the southwest. Larger towns are Azaz, some to the west, and Jarablus and Manbij, both some to the east.
Prior to the Syrian Civil War, the town was inhabited by a mixture of primarily Turkish speaking Kurds and Arabs, but also Turkmen families were present. Many of the Kurdish inhabitants in and around the city have fled due to Operation Euphrates Shield.

Railway

The Çobanbey Railway Border Gate which had been closed since 1981, was reopened on 22 December 2009 after the 62km line between Aleppo and Çobanbey was renewed. The opening ceremony was attended by the transport ministers of Turkey and Syria, Binali Yıldırım and Yarob Süleyman.

Syrian Civil War

In the Syrian Civil War, al-Rai was captured by Free Syrian Army forces and held until early February 2014, when the FSA-allies the Al-Tawhid Brigade and Conquest Brigade were assaulted by a predominantly Chechen unit of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, who seized the town on 3 February 2014.
Since then, ISIL considered the town its main stronghold in the Aleppo countryside. In the course of their Northern Aleppo offensive, FSA units captured the town twice in April 2016 and in June 2016, but both times were not able to withstand counterattacks by ISIL. The FSA recaptured the town a third time in the August 2016 Battle of al-Rai, but lost it yet another time to an ISIL counterattack later in August. In late August 2016, rebels were reported to have recaptured the town for the fourth time with the help of Turkish forces and to have seized several villages close by.
of the Al-Bab District.