Jihadist fighters linked
to Al-Qaeda set fire to statues and crosses inside churches in northern Syria
on Thursday and destroyed a cross on a church clock tower, AFP reported.
Islamic State of Iraq
and the Levant (ISIL) fighters entered the Greek Catholic Church of Our Lady of
the Annunciation in the northern city of Raqa and torched the religious
furnishings inside, the Syria Observatory for Human Rights said.
They did the same at the
Armenian Catholic Church of the Martyrs, and also destroyed a cross atop its
clock tower, replacing it with the ISIL flag, the Observatory said.
Most of Raqa, located on
the banks of the Euphrates River and capital of the province of the same name,
fell to anti-regime fighters in March.
Where the ISIL dominates
in the city, it imposes a strict version of sharia (Islamic law) on the
populace.
The London-based
Observatory denounced these attacks "against the freedom of religion,
which are an assault on the Syrian revolution."
Not only have there been
attacks on Christian places of worship in Syria, a predominantly Sunni Muslim
country wracked by more than two years of civil war, but also on Shiite Muslim
mosques.
Additionally, Christians
clerics have been kidnapped, and some brutally murdered, by jihadists.
In January, the Middle
East director of Human Rights Watch, Sarah Leah Whitson, said: "The
destruction of religious sites is furthering sectarian fears and compounding
the tragedies of the country.
"Syria will lose
its rich cultural and religious diversity if armed groups do not respect places
of worship."
The New York-based group
said that "while some opposition leaders have pledged to protect all
Syrians, in practice the opposition has failed to properly address the
unjustified attacks against minority places of worship."
At the outset of the
rebellion against President Bashar al-Assad, rebels welcomed the support of
jihadist groups, largely made up of foreign fighters.
But the jihadists, where
they have reached a position of dominance in specific parts of the country, are
increasingly alienating the native population.
On Thursday, an ISIL
commander from the United Arab Emirates was killed in fighting with Kurds in
the north of Syria, the Observatory said.
Source: AFP
Zaman Alwasl
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