(Reuters) - Fighting between the Syrian arm of al Qaeda and Western-backed rebels in northern Syria spread from Aleppo province into neighboring Idlib on Friday, the rebel group and an organization monitoring the civil war said. Clashes began on Thursday when the al Qaeda Syria
wing, the Nusra Front, seized positions from the Hazzm movement west of
Aleppo, threatening one of the few remaining pockets of the non-jihadist
insurgency. A Hazzm
official said by telephone clashes had spread to Idlib and that his
group had retaken some areas previously controlled by Nusra. "There
is now fighting in Idlib, in the Jabal al-Zawiya area," he said. He
said in Aleppo province the two groups were also fighting in Atarib, a
town 20 km (12 miles) from the Turkish border. The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said heavy fighting overnight
focused on the Regiment 46 base in western Aleppo and overlapping areas
between Aleppo and Idlib province, where the Nusra Front pushed out
rebels from many areas in October. The Observatory, which monitors the war, said Hazzm had captured some small checkpoints in Idlib. Hazzm is one of the last remnants of non-jihadist opposition to President Bashar al-Assad in northern Syria, much of which has been seized by the Nusra Front and Islamic State, an offshoot of al Qaeda that controls roughly a third of Syria. The
Nusra Front said it was forced to act after Hazzm detained two of its
fighters and captured its weapons and offices. It said its forces had
captured the Sheikh Suleiman base from Hazzm, about 25km west of Aleppo,
on Thursday. "It's
probably most accurate to view this as the latest instance of Nusra
efforts to expand their areas of dominance in Idlib and Aleppo at the
expense of Western-backed factions, which they are gradually seeking to
eliminate from the north," said Noah Bonsey, senior analyst on Syria with International Crisis Group. The
Syrian Islamist militant Ahrar al-Sham, which has worked with both
groups, called for an end to the clashes and said the disagreement
should be settled in an independent sharia court. "We
are ready to bring back the rights that our brothers in Nusra claimed
(were taken) by Hazzm," the statement, posted on the group's Twitter
account, said. Both Hazzm -- part of the Free Syria Army collection of mainstream rebel groups -- and Nusra fight the government. The
Observatory said Nusra and other Islamist militants also fought the
Syrian army in the al-Arbaeen mountain area of western Idlib on Friday.
Syrian state television said the Syrian army repelled what it said were
several terrorist attacks in the area. Hazzm
has received what it describes as small amounts of military aid from
foreign states opposed to Assad, including U.S.-made anti-tank missiles.
But it has lost ground to better armed and financed jihadists. The
weakness of the mainstream Syrian opposition has complicated diplomatic
efforts to end the conflict that has killed around 200,000 people.
Syria battle between al Qaeda and Western-backed group spreads
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