(Reuters) - Eight rebel fighters have been crucified in Syria by the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) because they were considered too moderate, a monitoring group said on Sunday. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which relies on contacts on the ground in Syria, said the men were crucified on Saturday in Aleppo province. It added that their corpses were still on view. The
Observatory said clashes between rival Islamist groups in Syria had
killed around 7,000 people since January, as militants from ISIL try to
strengthen their grip on territory. The infighting has complicated the insurgency and drawn in foreign fighters. ISIL,
a radical al Qaeda offshoot group, has captured areas on both sides of
the Iraqi-Syrian border after seizing the Iraqi city of Mosul on June 10
and sweeping towards Baghdad. In
Syria, ISIL has battled with groups such as the Nusra Front, al Qaeda's
official Syrian wing, in the uprising against President Bashar al-Assad
which started with pro-democracy protests but has descended into civil
war. The Observatory, an
anti-Assad group which tracks the violence, said the vast majority were
killed in explosions, including car bombings and suicide attacks. It
monitored the infighting in seven provinces. It
said ISIL had executed the eight men in Aleppo province for belonging
to more moderate groups. The men were crucified in the town square of
Deir Hafer in eastern Aleppo and would be left there for three days, it
said. The men were accused
of being "Sahwa" fighters, the Observatory said, a term ISIL uses to
refer to rival combatants whom it accuses of being controlled by Western
powers. ISIL also
crucified another man in the province in al-Bab town near the Turkish
border, it said. He was pinned up for eight hours as a punishment for
giving false testimony but survived the ordeal, the Observatory said. ISIL, a rebranding of al Qaeda in Iraq
which fought American forces during the U.S. occupation, has been
disowned by the al Qaeda leadership, partly because of its brutality and
indiscriminate attacks. The
group has alienated many civilians and opposition activists by imposing
harsh rulings against dissent, even beheading its opponents, in areas
it controls. ISIL follows al Qaeda's hard-line ideology but draws its strength from foreign fighters, battle-hardened from Iraq. The
military gains by ISIL have highlighted how the conflict in Iraq is
intertwined with the civil war in Syria, where more than 160,000 people
have been killed. On Saturday, Islamist rebels fought back in Syria's border town of Albu Kamal, challenging the hold of ISIL. ISIL
fighters had appeared to be consolidating their hold over Albu Kamal
during the week when the local leader of the rival Nusra Front pledged
allegiance to them. ISIL,
which wants to create a severe Islamic state that straddles
international borders, controls much of Syria's eastern oil-producing
Euphrates River region. Its
lightning gains in Iraq's Sunni Muslim northern and western provinces
over the last three weeks mean ISIL now commands a large cross-border
expanse of land.
ISIS crucifies eight rival fighters, says monitoring group
Reuters
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