An ISIS bride has pleaded not to be 'judged too harshly' after escaping the terror group's last remaining territory in Syria.

The 46-year-old Canadian woman, Kimberley, said she 'didn't know all the politics' when she travelled to Syria as a 'humanitarian'.

She said she had been imprisoned by ISIS and escaped their last holdout in Baghouz, where tens of thousands of civilians have fled to opposition territory.

Syrian fighters backed by the United States are battling to force ISIS out of Baghouz in a final push this week.

Kimberley, a 46-year-old Canadian woman who travelled to Syria claiming she 'didn't know all the politics', at a Kurdish-controlled camp after fleeing the terror group's remaining territory

Speaking to ITV News at a Kurdish-controlled camp, she said: 'I knew that they were fighting but I didn't know all the politics.

'I came as a humanitarian, I came wanting to help to offer the skills that I had to help mainly women and children here.

'It's constant bombings, it's constant people fleeing, it's people fleeing, it's pulling bodies from houses, it's pulling children from houses as they collapse.

'I would say that for the women that are still there and for the children, that if you want to leave, come, you'll be OK.

'And I would say for the families back home, don't judge too harsh.

'These people have been through an awful lot and they actually need your support and they need your help and they need their countries to back them up or you run the risk of them, some of them, becoming the very problem by pushing them away.'

She said she wanted to be reunited with her family in Canada, where her sister said Kimberley had 'not acted rationally'.

Syrian fighters are battling a fierce jihadist counteroffensive as they push to take the last scrap of land from ISIS in the east of the country, which may fall within days.

A diagram showing the last remaining ISIS territory in Syria in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor, where U.S.-backed coalition forces have launched a bid to push them out

Smoke from an airstrike is seen on the front line in Baghouz as the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) stepped up their final campaign to oust the remaining ISIS fighters

The Canadian woman who fled ISIS is seen inside a Kurdish-controlled camp. She has said she wants to be reunited with her family in Canada

The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), backed by artillery fire from a U.S.-led coalition, launched the final push on the Iraqi border on Saturday.

Up to 600 jihadists as well as hundreds of civilians are believed to remain inside the ISIS patch.

Tens of thousands of people, mostly women and children related to ISIS fighters, have fled the shrinking jihadist holdout, many of them claiming they were not supporters of the terror group.

On Monday the U.S.-led coalition maintained a steady beat of bombings on the area as the SDF faced ferocious resistance.

The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 12 SDF fighters and 19 jihadists were killed in the fighting on Monday.

U.S. President Donald Trump said on Monday that the coalition may declare victory over IS in the region in the coming days.

The alliance has been battling to oust the jihadists from the eastern province of Deir Ezzor since September.

Wreckage: A Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) armored vehicle drives through destroyed streets near the front line in Baghouz