By Alexander Dziadosz
Source: Yahoo News
BEIRUT (Reuters) - An al Qaeda
splinter group in Syria pulled out of two provinces in the country's
northwest on Friday and headed to its eastern strongholds after months
of clashes with rival rebels, activists said.
The Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), a former al Qaeda
affiliate, and competing insurgents have been fighting since the start
of the year, killing over 3,000 people and undermining the revolt
against President Bashar al-Assad.
On Friday, ISIL - which alienated many rebels by seizing territory and
killing rival commanders - finished withdrawing from the Idlib and
Latakia provinces and moved its forces toward the eastern Raqqa province
and the eastern outskirts of the northern city of Aleppo, activists
said.
The Britain-based
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group said the withdrawal
was overseen by the Nusra Front, al Qaeda's acknowledged branch in
Syria, making the two provinces "completely free" of ISIL forces.
The group later alienated many residents with a drive to implement a strict interpretation of Islamic law, but has also maintained sympathy in some areas because of its reputation for keeping looting and thievery in check.
"There's been an
uneasy calm on all sides" since the withdrawal of ISIL forces, one
activist from Idlib province said. "Civilians aren't celebrating because
ISIL had eliminated thieves and bandits."
The Observatory's director Rami Abdulrahman said ISIL had been weakened
by clashes and defections in the areas it had withdrawn from, but still
had control over Raqqa province and plenty of resources to draw on.
AMBUSH
A video posted online on Friday showed two fighters touring what they
said were abandoned buildings that had been used by ISIL as a court and a
prison in a town in the Jebel al-Akrad region. One fighter said the
withdrawal had happened peacefully after negotiations between ISIL and
other rebels.
ISIL started
off as a rebranding of al Qaeda's branch in neighboring Iraq, but the
parent organization announced it was cutting ties with the group last
month over its refusal to limit itself to fighting in Iraq.
The Nusra Front, al Qaeda's Syria branch, has occasionally clashed with
ISIL but has also tried to broker truces between ISIL and rival
factions and fought alongside the group against government forces in
other areas.
In a separate incident, the Syrian army killed 20 militants in an
ambush in Tel Kalakh, a village 40 km (25 miles) west of Homs, a
military source told Reuters. Lebanon's Al Manar television channel also
reported the incident.
The
source said the attack happened near a customs checkpoint close to the
border with Lebanon, about 4 km (2.5 miles) from the village.
Pro-government Twitter accounts said the militants had been trying to
enter Lebanon's Wadi Khaled after fleeing the Sunni town of al-Hosn, but
Reuters could not independently verify these reports.
The source also said Syria's army had reached the eastern entrances of
Yabroud, a rebel-held town near the border with Lebanon where the
military has been making recent advances.
(Additional reporting by Stephen Kalin and Mariam Karouny; Editing by Tom Heneghan)
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