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PEACE BE UNTO ALL THE TRUTHERS,SEEK KNOWLEDGE FROM CRADLE TO GRAVE
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POWER HUNGRY...SYRIA OPPOSITION,STILL KILLING EACH OTHER ... http://www.reuters.com/article/2013/07/06/us-syria-crisis-infighting-idUSBRE96506Z20130706
The latest internecine clashes happened in the
town of al-Dana, near the Turkish border, on Friday, local activists
said. The opposition group known as the Free Youths of Idlib said dozens
of fighters were killed, wounded or imprisoned.A
report from the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, an opposition
monitoring group, said that the bodies of a commander and his brother,
from the local Islam Battalion, were found beheaded. Local activists
working for the British-based group said the men's heads were found next
to a trash bin in a main square.
The
exact reason for the clashes have been hard to pin down, but many rebel
groups have been chafing at ISIS's rise in power. It has subsumed the
once dominant Nusra Front, a more localized group of al Qaeda-linked
fighters that had resisted calls by foreign radicals to expand its scope
beyond the Syrian revolt to a more regional Islamist mission"PERSONAL GLORY AND WORLDLY AIMS"Residents
of rebel-held territories in the north once welcomed hardline Islamist
groups, even those linked to al Qaeda which often included radical
foreign militants with experience of fighting in Afghanistan and Iraq.Town
leaders would say the hardline groups were better organized, less
corrupt and set up administrative councils to keep electricity running
and food supplies coming in.
But
locals are growing more wary of the groups, particularly ISIS, as they
impose their austere interpretations of Islamic law. Some say the groups
have beaten or executed residents seen as defying them.Protests
against radical Islamist groups are becoming more commonThe
Observatory said the al-Dana clashes were set off at an anti-ISIS
protest when some Islamist militants fired at the demonstration.But
other activists in Idlib province, where al-Dana is located, argued
that the clashes were more about local power struggles than
demonstrations.ISIS units are
believed to be buying up land and property in some parts of Idlib and
Aleppo province, and they also have tried to control supplies of wheat
and oil in other rebel areas.
Islamist groups that support al Qaeda posted statements on Facebook and Twitter saying that they had not started the clashes and had not tried to impose their will on locals.The
Islamic State has been running many missionary activities in al-Dana,
through religious guidance and counseling and posting road signs that
exhort the virtues of morality, while also working to keep the city safe
and offer conflict resolution," a statement in the name of ISIS read.The
Free Youth Movement of Idlib, an activist group, lambasted both the
Qaeda militants and the local rebel group that fought them."The
two sides are fighting over power, as if the regime had already fallen
... Do not paint one side as better than the other" it said."These
fighters were part of two groups who are battling on the front line,
but they are doing it for personal glory and worldly aims. Martyr after
martyr from both groups are falling each day on the front lines... God
keep us away from chaos and temptation."
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