7 media
activists have been kidnapped by an armed group in Aleppo Wednesday, Syrian Revolution
Commission said.
The activists were in ‘Shada Al Horriya’ satellite channel bureau when two cars likely affiliated to the State of Iraq and The Levant (ISIL) stormed the office in al-Kallaseh neighborhood and arrested them forcibly, the commission said.
The militants opened fire on the activists when they resisted the abduction, one of them had been wounded and left on the ground.
Syria
is most dangerous country for media in 2013 where 19 journalists have been killed,
in addition at least 18 foreign
and 20 Syrian journalists are believed to be missing in the country after being
detained or kidnapped there, the International News Safety
Institute (INSI) said.
In recent months, ISIL has gained increasing
control in Aleppo and its countryside.
ISIL is considered one of the most
extremist and intolerant groups currently involved in the fighting against
Bashar Assad, even in comparison to the other rebel group linked to al-Qaeda,
Jabhat al-Nusra.
The group’s gains have underscored growing
infighting among rebel factions seeking to oust Assad. A recent takeover of opposition
warehouses by ISIL members spurred the US and UK to announce they would suspend
the nonlethal aid they had been providing to Syrian rebels.
Overall the Syrian death total was down
from 28 in 2012, but abductions of both foreign and local reporters increased,
leading many international news organizations to stop sending journalists to
cover the conflict.
Syria's armed
uprising began as a series of peaceful democracy protests 33 months ago but
escalated into a full-blown civil war after Assad's regime launched a brutal
crackdown on dissent.
The conflict
is estimated to have killed around 126,000 people and displaced millions more.
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