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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
ISIL crucifies 8 rebels in Syria's Aleppo
2014-06-30
The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) militants publicly executed and crucified eight rebels fighting President Bashar Al Assad’s regime, a monitor said on Sunday.
It's how the caliphate rolls...
The report comes amid fierce clashes on the outskirts of Damascus between the Isil, 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 group 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 crucified for eight hours as a form of punishment in Al Bab town near the border with Turkey. He survived the ordeal.
So they did it again...
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 abuses
...like crucifying those who oppose them...
quickly turned the Syrian opposition, including Islamists, against the group.

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.

Until recently, the regime had rarely targeted ISIL bastions, but ever since the group’s Iraq offensive, the air force has intensified its strikes against Isil areas.

“On Sunday, there were intense air raids on Raqa and Buseira” in Deir Ezzor, Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said. “It appears Assad’s regime wants to make the United States, which fears ISIL's advances, see it as a partner in the war on terror."

East of Damascus, “fierce clashes broke out early on 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 Hezbollah, meanwhile, pounded rebel positions near the capital, said the Local Coordination Committees activist network.
Posted by:Steve White

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