Personal strifes between two of rebels has
developed into armed clash killing a
pregnant woman with her husband leaving their son wounded, an eyewitness told
Zaman Alwasl.
Two fighters of the Free
Syrian Army has opened fire on small carriage in Aleppo countryside what led to death of the small family.
This
accident wasn't the first in Aleppo, two weeks ago Aleppo
Media Center confirmed killing of a woman and her husband wounded by member of
Shariah Authority in Aleppo.
Mayada Marei, 44,
was killed by gunshot of Shariah members were chasing two armed men in Aleppo.
FSA had arrested the man to be subjected to trial, according to Media Center.
As Syria’s civil war
enters its third year, the rebels are struggling to figure out how to govern
the large swaths of territory they have seized. In Aleppo, which has no unified
rebel command and is riven by factions, the job hasn’t been easy: The city has
two rival legal systems, each controlling its own terrain and backed by different
militias, NYtimes reported from Aleppo last month.
Many members of the
Shariah Authority come from the countryside or have ties to the petty
bourgeoisie in the cities — socially conservative Sunni traders and merchants.
The members of the Integrated Judicial Council, on the other hand, are all part
of the urban professional class and were relatively privileged by their
relationship with the government prior to the war, NYtimes reported from Aleppo
last month.
And so the question isn’t so much whether Islam
will play a central role in postwar Syria: That matter has already been decided
by the insurgents’ almost unanimously Sunni character and increasingly
religious cast.
The
27-month-long conflict has claimed more than 100,000 lives, the Observatory
announced Wednesday. Meanwhile, Assad’s forces, backed by militants from the
Lebanese Shiite movement Hezbollah, have made creeping gains in recent months.
Editing by Mohamed Hamdan
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