Infighting between Syrian
rebels threatened a hospital in the northern city of Aleppo on Sunday, a source
said, forcing doctors to hide patients as clashes flared between Islamists and
members of the Free Syrian Army.
"Doctors
are working neutrally, treating both sides," said the source in northern
Syria, who asked to remain anonymous for fear of reprisal attacks.
As
doctors treat the wounded, fighters from the FSA and the al Qaeda-linked
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria, or ISIS, are fighting outside the hospital and
plotting to attack each other inside, the source said.
The
clashes come after the FSA gave ISIS members a 24-hour ultimatum to surrender
and leave the country and arrested 200 members of the al Qaeda-linked group.
"We repeat that we don't want any foreign
fighters in Syria," FSA spokesman Loauy Mokdad told CNN on Saturday.
"We do not want any terrorist groups in Syria. We will not allow them to
make bases in Syria."
For
months, the groups maintained an uneasy alliance as they fought to topple
Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's government.
But
now, infighting within the rebel groups has threatened to tip the balance among
rebel forces toward militant groups and away from more secular brigades.
The
FSA has accused ISIS of killing FSA officers and committing crimes against
civilians.
"After
six months attempting to hijack our revolution and after they controlled some
liberated areas and after they start to force our people to act like Islamic
state, we gave so many warnings to them, that's something not acceptable for
us," Mokdad said.
ISIS
issued its own ultimatum on Saturday, giving the FSA 24 hours to free their
prisoners, or they will leave their joint posts with the FSA in Aleppo.
Meanwhile,
the source said, time is running out at hospitals in the violence-ravaged area,
where diesel fuel needed for generators and ambulances is in short supply and
could run out within days.
Doctors,
the source said, face danger from all sides. While rebels clash, the source
described how government forces are closing in on three sides of the city.
"The
medical staff in Aleppo will be targeted by ISIS if they know that they are
treating FSA patients, by FSA if they know that they are treating ISIS
patients, and by (the) regime's airstrikes if they know that they are treating
both," the source said.
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