Nearly 1,400 people have been
killed in Syria since clashes between rebel forces and the jihadist Islamic
State of Iraq and The Levant (ISIL)
erupted this month, AFP reported.
“The number
of people killed in fighting between the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
and Islamist and rebel forces since January 3 has risen to 1,395,” the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights said.
The
Observatory said the figure included 760 moderate and Islamist rebels, 426 ISIL
fighters, 190 civilians and 19 others whose identities have not been
established.
Clashes
between rebels and jihadists from ISIL erupted early in January after months of
rising tensions.
While
opposition fighters initially welcomed foreign jihadists to the battle, ISIL
has been accused of a string of abuses against civilians and rival rebel
groups.
Among the
abuses that sparked the fierce clashes was the kidnap, torture and execution by
the group of a doctor from a powerful Islamist rebel brigade, AFP said.
The all-out
fight has seen ISIL lose territory in Idlib and Aleppo provinces, but it has
consolidated its hold over Raqa city, the only provincial capital to fall from
regime control.
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