Crimes by Islamic militia 'State of Iraq an al-Sham' has been increasing, amid an atmosphere of bewilderment among Syrians. The last crime was killing member of the revolutionary council in Lattakia and noble leader in Free Syrian Army.
The commander
of chief of staff, Slaim Idriss has
mourned 'Abo bassir al-Lathkkani as big loss for FSA. Pointing out that his martyrdom
was during his tour around the military checkpoints of Assad'd Army.
Activists
accused in statement that leader of 'al-Ez ben Abulsalam' Brigades was killed
by militants of the ' State of Iraq and al-Sham' Militia.
In the early days of the Syrian uprising, when opponents of the regime were desperate for assistance from any quarter, jihadist fighters were welcomed but a spate of abuses is fueling a backlash.
Things have changed.
Week ago, "Out,
out, out, the (Islamic) State (of Iraq and Syria) must get out,"
protesters shouted at a rally in the northern town of Manbij, referring to an
Al-Qaeda front group.
The video
of the demonstration is one of many showing how civilians and mainstream rebel
fighters alike are turning against the more hardline Islamist factions.
The rebel
forces seeking to overthrow President Bashar al-Assad are disparate but many
espouse political Islam of one form or another.
There are
two main Al-Qaeda linked factions, both with Iraqi origins, according to
Washington -- the Al-Nusra Front, which has operational independence, and the
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), a front for Al-Qaeda in Iraq.
Numerous
other smaller groups, many of them composed almost exclusively of foreign
fighters, are also operating on the ground.
Unlike the
mainstream rebel Free Syrian Army, which has received weapons from several Gulf
Arab governments as well as promises of US arms, the jihadist groups rely on
private donations.
But there
are enough wealthy benefactors attracted to their fundamentalist vision to
ensure a steady stream of weapons, as well as volunteer fighters from around
the world, many of them seasoned in other conflicts.
That has
helped them become a fighting force out of proportion to their numbers, and
they have captured several population centres.
But their
imposition of their extreme form of Islam has increasingly alienated civilians.
In Raqa,
the only provincial capital in rebel hands, the Al-Nusra Front is accused of
detaining dozens of men.
"My
father has been held for a month by the Front. They think they're Islamic... I
want my father to be free," weeps a little girl in one Raqa protest,
footage of which was posted online.
"We
reject this oppressive brand of Islam... We are Muslims. You're just
fakes," a woman protester cried in another video from Raqa, demanding the
release of the men held by Nusra.
Activists
in the city also point to the disappearance of Abdallah al-Khalil, a veteran
dissident and human rights activist.
"Khalil
was about to open up council elections to the whole of Raqa. Al-Nusra was
against the idea. He disappeared the next day," an activist from Raqa told
AFP, speaking on condition of anonymity for fear of retaliation.
"Although
their methods differ from the regime's, they are just as brutal.
"As
they get more powerful militarily, they do whatever it takes to stem the growth
of freedom in liberated (rebel-held) areas. They want power, not
democracy."
Reports
emerged on Wednesday that a Raqa-based activist who has documented the uprising
against Assad since its early days has been detained by ISIS.
"The
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria detained the media activist Mohammad Nour Matar
on Tuesday evening outside its base... after he stood alongside a woman who
tried to stage a sit-in," Matar's brother Amer told AFP.
In Idlib
province in the northwest, whose borders with Turkey have allowed foreign
jihadists to join the fighting in numbers, dozens of mainstream rebels were
killed in a battle with ISIS last week, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
said.
The
fighting broke out after rebels protested against the detention by the
jihadists of a 12-year-old boy accused of uttering a blasphemous phrase.
"The
chief of the (Free Syrian Army-affiliated) Hamzah Assadullah Brigade and his
brother were both killed" in the fighting, the Britain-based watchdog
said.
"We
haven't seen many such battles, but it is clear the anger against the Islamic
State and other jihadists is on the rise across Syria," its director Rami
Abdel Rahman.
The case
echoed that of a 14-year-old boy executed by ISIS fighters in the main northern
city of Aleppo who accused him of blasphemy for using a colloquial phrase.
Rahman
said mainstream rebels appeared set for a new confrontation with their jihadist
rivals in Idlib after ISIS demanded that all other groups surrender their
weapons.
Nizar, an
activist from the eastern province of Deir Ezzor, said: "Time is running
out for all these (jihadist) groups.
"They
use violence and religion to try control us and, although people are afraid to
openly express their dissent, no one wants them."
(with AFP)
Comments About This Article
Please fill the fields below.