Ottawa Citizen

Syrian group slams militants

Al-Qaida offshoot accused of negating revolution principles

- BASSEM MROUE

BEIRUT Syria’s main Western-backed opposition group warned on Friday that the expanding influence of alQaida-linked militants in the rebel movement is underminin­g its struggle for a free Syria.

The warning came as a ceasefire ended fighting near the Turkish border between the mainstream rebels and jihadis belonging to the alQaida offshoot known as the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant. During the battle, the ISIL militants overran the town of Azaz.

As the ceasefire took hold, ISIL fought heavy street battles against Kurdish gunmen in northern Syria.

The infighting was some of the worst in recent months between forces seeking to bring down President Bashar Assad, and it threatened to further fragment an opposition movement outgunned by the regime.

Syria’s main Westernbac­ked opposition group, the Free Syrian Army, condemned ISIL, saying the jihadis’ push to establish an Islamic state undermines the rebels’ struggle for a free Syria.

In a strongly worded statement, it accused ISIL of going against the principles of the Syrian revolution.

“ISIL no longer fights the Assad regime. Rather, it is strengthen­ing its positions in liberated areas at the expense of the safety of civilians,” the statement said. “ISIL is inflicting on the people the same suppressio­n of the Baath party and the Assad regime.”

Al-Qaida-linked fighters in Syria have been some of the most effective forces on the battlefiel­d, fighting alongside the Free Syrian Army against government forces. But the two factions have turned their guns on each other, and turf wars and retaliator­y killings have evolved into ferocious battles that have effectivel­y become a war within a war in northern and eastern Syria, leaving hundreds dead on both sides.

Late Thursday, fighters from ISIL and the Free Syrian Army agreed on an immediate cease-fire in Azaz, activists and opposition groups said. The two sides also agreed to free fighters captured by each side, according to the Britishbas­ed Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights.

The deal calls for setting up a checkpoint between the two sides. They also agreed to take disagreeme­nts before an Islamic council that would soon be establishe­d to resolve disputes.

The fighting in Azaz and the prospect of al-Qaida militants so close to the frontier prompted Turkey to close a nearby border crossing.

Veteran opposition figure Kamal Labwani said the internatio­nal community’s disregard for Syrian lives has strengthen­ed extremists in Syria, adding that the ISIL has become a force that the FSA is unable to deal with.

ISIL “invaded Azaz in one hour. Nobody can confront such extremists. They know how to work, they know how to plan,” he said.

Labwani said the FSA had no choice but to agree to a truce because it cannot afford to open another front.

The extremists’ presence “has spread like a disease which cannot be stopped,” he said.

But as the fighting in Azaz died down, ISIL fighters fought heavy streets battles against Kurdish gunmen in the northern province of Raqqa, the Observator­y said. Such battles between the two groups have been common in the past months.

 ?? MANU BRABO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES ?? Fighters of the Free Syrian Army, Syria’s main Western-backed opposition group, take their positions close to a military base, near the town of Azaz. On Friday, a ceasefire ended fighting near the Turkish border between the mainstream rebels and...
MANU BRABO/THE ASSOCIATED PRESS FILES Fighters of the Free Syrian Army, Syria’s main Western-backed opposition group, take their positions close to a military base, near the town of Azaz. On Friday, a ceasefire ended fighting near the Turkish border between the mainstream rebels and...

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