Beirut (AFP) - A jihadist group
in Syria has publicly executed and crucified nine men, eight of them
rebels fighting both President Bashar al-Assad's regime and the
jihadists, a monitor said on Sunday.
The report
comes amid fierce clashes on the outskirts of Damascus between the
Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, which is spearheading a major
offensive in Iraq, and rebels, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
said.
"ISIL executed eight
men in Deir Hafer in the east of Aleppo province" on Saturday because
they belonged to rebel groups that had fought against the jihadists as
well as Assad's forces, it said.
ISIL then "crucified them in the
main square of the village, where their bodies will remain for three
days", the Britain-based monitor said.
Also in Aleppo province, a ninth man was executed and crucified in Al-Bab town near the border with Turkey.
ISIL
first emerged in Syria's war in late spring last year and was initially
welcomed by some Syrian rebels who believed its combat experience would
help topple Assad.
But subsequent jihadist abuses quickly turned the Syrian opposition, including Islamists, against ISIL.
Rebels
launched a major anti-ISIL offensive in January 2014, and have pushed
them out of large swathes of Aleppo province and all of Idlib in the
northwest.
However, ISIL
remains firmly rooted in Raqa, its northern Syrian headquarters, and
wields significant power in Deir Ezzor in the east near the border with
Iraq.
Activists say the
group's Iraq offensive and capture of heavy weapons -- some of them
US-made -- appears to have boosted its confidence in Syria.
East of Damascus, "fierce
clashes broke out early Sunday between rebels from the Army of Islam and
ISIL near the town of Hammuriyeh", the Observatory said.
The
Army of Islam is a major component of the Islamic Front, Syria's
largest rebel coalition which has been fighting ISIL for months, but
such fighting in Damascus province is unprecedented.
Regime
soldiers and warplanes backed by Lebanon's Shiite Hezbollah also
pounded rebel positions near the capital with rockets and
surface-to-surface missiles, said the Local Coordination Committees
activist network.
Syria's war
began as a peaceful protest movement in March 2011 demanding political
change, but became an armed insurgency when Assad's regime unleashed a
brutal crackdown.
Many months
into the fighting, jihadists began to flock to Syria where upwards of
162,000 people have been killed and millions displaced in more than
three years of conflict.
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