(Reuters) - A senior Lebanese-Canadian commander in the Shi'ite Muslim militant group Hezbollah has been killed in Syria
where he was fighting alongside Syrian government troops against
rebels, security sources and a monitoring group said on Tuesday. Fawzi Ayoub, who is on the FBI's "most wanted" list for attempting to bomb Israel,
was killed on Monday by the predominantly Sunni Muslim rebel forces who
have been waging war on Syrian President Bashar al-Assad for more than
three years. Hezbollah has
joined the Syrian government in a increasingly sectarian conflict that
is pulling in fighters from across the region and destabilizing Syria's
neighbors. Sunni Muslim
Islamist groups, some of them linked to al Qaeda, have joined mostly
Sunni Syrian rebels against the Assad, who belongs to the Alawite sect,
an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam. Ayoub
was arrested in the West Bank in 2000 and spent four years in an
Israeli jail before being released as part of a prisoner swap, the
sources said. He is a prominent member of Hezbollah and comes from the
southern village of Ain Qaana. He
also holds Canadian citizenship and has lived in the United States. The
anti-Assad Syrian Observatory for Human Rights confirmed that Ayoub had
been killed in Syria. The
sources said Ayoub was killed in Nawa, a town in the southern Syrian
province of Deraa, the cradle of the Syrian uprising-turned-war in which
160,000 people have been killed.
Hezbollah commander killed fighting rebels in Syria: sources

Zaman Alwasl
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