A double bomb attack in
Aleppo carried out by al-Qaeda-affiliated group, the Islamic State of Iraq and The
Levant (ISIL), claimed the lives of at
least 16 Syrian rebel fighters on Sunday, an NGO said.
The attack, which took
place in the town of al-Ra'ei, not far from the Syrian border with Turkey, also
injured another 20 rebel fighters, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
said.
An ISIL fighter blew
himself up at the headquarters of an Islamist rebel brigade in the Aleppo town,
while a car bomb detonated outside at the same time, the Observatory said.
The Observatory said the
bombings came as fighters gathered at the headquarters to discuss the
possibility of a truce in the fighting with ISIS that has raged throughout
rebel-controlled areas.
The bomber had reportedly
offered to negotiate with the rebels in the name of ISIL, but detonated an
explosive belt inside the headquarters.
According to Agence
France-Presse, the rebels were Islamist brigades that have joined moderate
rebels in fighting the jihadist ISIS since the beginning of a backlash in early
January.
The rebel-jihadist
clashes have killed around 1,400 people since they began, although the
Observatory says the real toll is likely much higher because both sides are
secretive about their losses.
Meanwhile, the ISIL has
formed two female battalions in Syria’s northern city of Raqqa, pan-Arab
newspaper Asharq al-Awsat reported on Sunday.
The battalions were reportedly launched as part of ISIL’ efforts to “expose male activists who disguise in women’s clothing to avoid detention when stopping at the ISILcheckpoints.” With AFP, Al Arabiya
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