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Nabk: brutal presence for Iraqi militias far from Shiite shrines

  

Amid news of Assad’s advances in al-Nabk, one of the last rebel-held areas in Qalamoun, activists reported a mounting presence of Iraqi Shi’ite militias for the first time in battlefields far away from the Shiite shrines.   

Thu al-Faqar brigade, most brutal Iraqi militia besides Abu Fadhl al-Abbas, posted online photos and news claimed legendary victories for the Iraqi militia which has committee two massacres so far in the border city with Lebanon, killing 50 people at least including women and children.

Syrian Opposition activists sparkled major outrage via social media against Thu al-Faqar Facebook page, called ‘Al Haidari Soldier’, (Al -Haidari is one of Ali bin Abi Talib’s alternative names) which has posted photos for an old man has been tortured and killed by the brigade commander in  al-Nabk.

The page reported that the Iraqi commander, Abu Shahd al-Jbouri, has been promoted by Assad Army to be lieutenant colonel as an honor rank for his priceless efforts in combating the terrorists in Syria

Assad's military resurgence this year has relied to a great extent on support from Shi'ite Iran and fighters from Lebanon's Hezbollah and Iraqi militias, some of them based around a Shi'ite shrine southeast of Damascus.

They have helped turn the tide against the Sunni Muslim rebels, whose ranks are increasingly dominated by Islamist fighters and al Qaeda-linked foreign jihadists.

"In the last few months Assad has been increasingly leaving the fighting in the urban areas, especially Damascus and its environs, to his Shi'ite allies," a Middle East security official said to Reuters.

The brigade quoted its name from an Islamic mythology, of the two-pointed ‘magical’ sword that has come to represent Ali Bin Abi Talib, fourth caliphate and son-in-law of prophet Muammad.

An estimated 126,000 people have been killed and millions displaced by Syria's civil war, which erupted after a fierce government crackdown on pro-democracy protests first held in March 2011.

 

 

Zaman Alwasl
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