The powerful al-Qaeda-affiliated
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) is mobilizing its troops near the
highway of Al-Bab city at the gate of Aleppo city as more reinforcements from
Azaz are coming to back the radical group that faces unexpected revolt by
Syrian rebels, Zaman Alwasl source said.
A newly formed Syrian Islamist rebel
alliance has declared war on ISIL and joined other opposition groups in
battling the extremists. For its part, Syria’s main opposition National
Coalition says it backs the rebel fight against al-Qaeda.
“We, the Army of the Mujahideen,
pledge to defend ourselves and our honor, wealth and lands, and to fight ISIL,
which has violated the rule of God, until it announces its dissolution,” said
the new alliance of eight groups, in a statement published on Facebook Friday.
As the statement was issued, it
fought in fierce clashes with the ISIL in the Aleppo and Idlib provinces of
northern Syria.
The Islamic Front, the largest rebel
alliance, which is made up of several powerful Islamist groups, and the Syrian
Revolutionaries Front, another major rebel bloc, also battled ISIL on Friday,
Agence France-Presse reported.
On Saturday, rebels battling
jihadists in northern Syria killed or captured scores of the militants loyal to
an al-Qaeda affiliate in two days of fighting, a watchdog said.
“At least 36 members and supporters
of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) have been killed since
Friday in Idlib and more than 100 have been captured by rebels” in Idlib and
Aleppo, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
“The Syrian Opposition Coalition fully
supports ongoing efforts by Free Syrian Army elements to liberate towns and
neighborhoods from the authoritarian oppression” of the Islamic State of Iraq
and the Levant (ISIL), the group’s presidency said in a statement.
“The Coalition stands in full
solidarity with all Syrians rising up against al-Qaeda’s extremism and calls
upon the international community to recognize the importance of supporting
revolutionary forces as partners in the fight against al-Qaeda’s extremism and
Assad’s sponsorship and encouragement of extremist forces,” it added.
For its part, the Army of Mujahideen,
a newly formed group made up of eight brigades, demanded that ISIL fighters
join the ranks of other rebel groups “or hand over their weapons and leave
Syria,” earlier on Saturday.
The alliance reproached ISIL for
“spreading strife and insecurity... in liberated [rebel] areas, spilling the
blood of fighters and wrongly accusing them of heresy, and expelling them and
their families from areas they have paid heavily to free” from Assad’s forces. (with Al Arabiya)
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