The activists and civil society in Aleppo have organized a protest in front of Sharia Council headquarter, demanding
justice for a 14-year-old boy, allegedly by al-Qaeda-linked fighters who
accused him of blasphemy..
In response to the increasing condemns, Aleppo's Sharia Council also
issues a "fatwa" forbidding the killing of anyone accused of
blasphemy without referring them to specialists.
The Council condemns the killing
of a 14-year-old boy for blasphemy after a statement delivered by of Jabhat al-Nusra said, ''We have nothing to
do with the issue involving the death of a boy in Al Shaar area for allegedly
making a blasphemous comment (cursed the prophet peace be upon him). Based on
this, we condemn what happened and affirm that this type of behavior is not
part of sharia."
Syrian rebels and activists have condemned the killing of a 14-year-old
boy, allegedly by al-Qaeda-linked fighters who accused him of blasphemy.
Residents of the northern city of Aleppo say Mohammad Qataa was shot dead
after being accused of misusing the name of the Prophet Muhammad.
A spokesman for the main rebel grouping, the Free Syrian Army (FSA),
called it an act of "terrorism".
Louay Meqdad stressed that those responsible were not linked to the FSA.
The killing had "no justification" and those responsible should
hand themselves over to the "legitimate authorities" in Aleppo, Mr
Meqdad told the Al-Jazeera TV station.
A statement from the Local Co-ordination Committees (LCC), a network of
activists inside Syria, called the killing a "heinous crime" and said
those responsible must face justice. according to BBC.
The LCC said it also held the National Coalition for Syrian Revolutionary
and Opposition Forces, the umbrella group for the Istanbul-based opposition,
"for failing to manage liberated areas and maintaining the security of its
citizens".
'Blasphemy' accusation
Mohammad Qataa was reportedly selling coffee on the street on Sunday when
someone asked to buy some on credit.
He is said to have replied: "Even if Muhammad came down from heaven,
I would not give you this coffee on credit."
According to one account, three men - one of whom had been the man who
asked for the coffee - declared that he had committed blasphemy by insulting
the Prophet Muhammad.
Mohammad was taken away in a car and was returned half an hour later too
badly beaten to walk.
Witnesses say he was then thrown on the pavement and shot dead.
A crowd of men and the boy's mother were all present but were too scared
to intervene, reports say.
The UK-based activist group the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
(SOHR) posted videos of Mohammad's parents and another eyewitness to the
killing.
The parents said that one of the men was from Aleppo, but they others
spoke standard Arabic, suggesting they may not be Syrian.
The FSA and the SOHR have both blamed the Islamic State of Iraq and
al-Sham, a group which was the result of a merger between Al-Qaeda's branch in
Iraq and some Syrian Islamist militants.
The mood in Aleppo has changed since the beginning of the year when
inhabitants compared Islamist brigades favourably to the FSA, which was was
often perceived as corrupt, the BBC's Paul Wood reports.
Now there are signs of discontent in the city against the Islamists, he
says.
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