An Al-Qaeda-affiliated group in Syria has
announced the execution of two soldiers and three "collaborators"
with President Bashar al-Assad's regime near Damascus, according to a statement
published on jihadist sites.
The Al-Nusra Front also published a photograph showing
the bodies of five men, their hands tied and their mouths bound with
handkerchiefs. Bloodstains can be seen on the ground next to the bodies.
"Al-Nusra Front has arrested several people
collaborating with the regime in Damascus province. They are known to have
assassinated fighters and other Muslims, and to have provided information to
enable the regime to bombard them," the Front said in a statement.
"God's will has been carried out against several
collaborators of the Nusayri regime," it added, using a derogatory term to
refer to Alawites.
Syria's anti-regime jihadists have an extremist,
sectarian interpretation of Sunni Islam, and brand non-Sunnis -- including
Alawites such as Assad -- as apostates.
The two soldiers among the group that was executed in
the Eastern Ghouta area east of Damascus included a member of Syria's elite
Republican Guard, the statement said.
The statement emerged amid a major rebel offensive
aimed at breaking a year-long army siege on the Eastern Ghouta area.
Scores of fighters have been killed on both sides in
the escalation.
Rebels have taken over several small villages since
Saturday, reversing a trend of army advances against opposition-held areas.
Meanwhile a monitoring group said Wednesday that
another jihadist group, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, had executed
the head of an anti-Assad rebel battalion, accusing him of
"apostasy".
ISIL executed "a rebel battalion leader, accusing
him of insulting God and of apostasy," the Syrian Observatory for Human
Rights said.
The battalion has been locked in combat against ISIL, which has pressed hard to crush other rebel groups in areas across eastern and northern Syria.
ISIL executed the rebel leader after holding him for
three days, the Observatory said.
Syrian activists have repeatedly denounced abuses
committed by jihadists, who have taken advantage of Syria's war to establish a
presence in the country.
Source: AFP
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