A
string of car bombs have hit the Islamist rebels' barracks and checkpoints, carried by the Islamic State of Iraq and The Levant (ISIL) since the infighting
has erupted two weeks ago.
Suicide
attacks and blasts seemed to be one of most dangerous war strategies by Al Qaeda
radicals, which left dozens of people killed and wounded.
The
recent car bombs were in Idlib and Aleppo like Jarabulus, Darkoush, Kafr Nouran,
Auweirig village and most formed ISIL’s headquarters.
Syrian
activists yesterday posted online a warning for people of rebel-held areas to
avoid strange things and to report about any suspicions of weird cars and baggage.
Since a fortnight, the Syrian Revolutionaries Front and the nascent Mujahedeen Army, the Islamic Front has been engaged in fierce fighting with ISIL in rebel-held areas.
Last
week, rebels overran the Aleppo headquarters of the ISIL, as claims emerged
that the Al-Qaeda linked group had massacred prisoners there in cold blood.
The
latest clashes broke out after residents accused ISIL members of killing a
doctor in Syria’s northern province of Aleppo.
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 130,000 people and displaced
millions more.
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