Tension Soars as Syria Rebel Chief Shot Dead by Jihadists

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Simmering hostility between Syria's mainstream rebels and jihadists erupted has erupted into naked violence, with a Free Syrian Army commander in the coastal province of Latakia being shot dead by an al-Qaida front group.

Kamal Hamami -- better known by his nom-de-guerre Abu Bassir al-Jeblawi -- was killed on Thursday by fighters of the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), one of the main jihadist groups operating in Syria, said witnesses and a monitoring group.

The killing follows months of tension between the mainstream, Arab and Western-backed rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) and jihadist groups affiliated to al-Qaida, most of whose fighters are non-Syrian.

A rebel allied to Abu Bassir said via Facebook he had witnessed what he said was a cold-blooded shooting at an ISIS checkpoint when the rebel chief was on his way to visit fellow fighters at the front.

"They told us we weren't allowed to cross, that they had orders from their emir, Abu Ayman," who heads ISIS in Latakia, said the witness, Abu Ahmad, who defected from the ranks of Syria's army to join the rebels.

"Abu Bassir told them: 'Did you come to our country to help us or to be a burden?' Abu Ayman then arrived at the scene. He said he would kill Abu Bassir, who replied: 'You have nothing to do with Islam.' Abu Ayman then killed him," he said without elaborating.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights gave a different version of events, saying Abu Bassir was killed when ISIS fighters tried to destroy an FSA checkpoint in the Jabal al-Turkman region, in the north of Latakia province.

"FSA rebels fired into the air, and subsequently, an ISIS fighter shot Abu Bassir dead and wounded two other fighters from his battalion," said the Observatory, which relies on a broad network of activists, doctors and lawyers for its reports.

The FSA's political and media coordinator Louay Muqdad said those behind the killing must "urgently" be handed over to the rebels for trial.

Experts link rising tensions to Western promises of aid to Syrian so long as they can guarantee weapons will not fall into the hands of extremists.

"A lot of these groups, they have to show a hardline against al-Qaida because that is what their funders expect from them," Middle East specialist Aron Lund told Agence France Presse.

"If they want money from U.S. they have to push out al-Qaida," Lund added.

French President Francois Hollande, whose country has been at the forefront of efforts to isolate the Assad regime, last month urged the FSA to push groups like Al-Nusra out of the zones they control.

AFP journalists met with Abu Bassir twice earlier this year.

The young commander, in his 30s, hailed from a wealthy family from the city of Latakia, but chose to join the rebellion in the province's mountains.

"They (jihadists) have left their homes, their countries to come fight our war. But this is our country and we don't want outsiders to come and rule over it. They must realise that they have to leave once the war ends," Abu Bassir told AFP in May.

Highly organised and respected by members of his Ezz Bin Abdel Salam battalion, Abu Bassir "was a moderate and believed in the idea of a democratic state", one of his friends, who would be named only as Aboud, told AFP via the Internet.

"During the liberation of the Christian village of Burj al-Kassab, a jihadist destroyed a cross. A fight broke out between Abu Bassir and the jihadists over this incident," he added.

Residents of Latakia province "are very angry" over the assassination, said Aboud, adding that "the regime (of President Bashar Assad) has tried for two years to kill Abu Bassir. And now these people come and kill him".

The incident is not the first of its kind.

Late last week, dozens of FSA fighters were killed in a battle against ISIS in the northwestern province of Idlib. The FSA battalion chief there was beheaded by ISIS and his brother slaughtered, said the Observatory.

In the early days of the Syrian uprising, when opponents of the regime were desperate for assistance from any quarter, jihadist fighters were welcomed but a spate of abuses has fueled a growing backlash.

In early June, ISIS was accused of executing a teenager in Aleppo in northern Syria, because he had committed "blasphemy".

Anti-Assad activists living in rebel areas are increasingly turning their attention to creating anti-ISIS campaigns, as the group's abuses multiply.

There are two main al-Qaida linked factions, both with Iraqi origins -- the Al-Nusra Front, which has operational independence, and the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS), a front for al-Qaida in Iraq. They are believed to have several thousand fighters on the ground in Syria.

While the FSA is fighting to overthrow the Assad regime, the jihadist groups are intent on installing an Islamic caliphate in Syria.

Comments 20
Thumb arzak-ya-libnan 12 July 2013, 16:17

I agree with you to a large extent FT. The only people who are paying the price of this war is the normal folks... it is becoming quite obvious that neither the regime not the opposition will be able to finish this militarily. It is time to find a political solution and let the people decide... under internationally monitored elections. however i hope you know see that there is a huge difference between the FSA and the fundamentalist groups such as al-nusra and the newly declared 313.

Thumb arzak-ya-libnan 12 July 2013, 16:18

*now, not know

Missing ArabDemocrat.com 12 July 2013, 17:22

Agreed

Missing zahle_night 12 July 2013, 17:19

Flamethrower, I agree with you but not before they hang the low life dictator Bashar upside down.. He caused enough misery in Lebanon and Syria and he should not go unpunished...

Default-user-icon The Truth (Guest) 12 July 2013, 20:27

But I thought all of the rebels were Wahhabi terrorists? What happened to that lie?

Missing --karim_m2 13 July 2013, 01:20

That's still the basic truth. The FSA = Syrian branch of Al Qaeda, no matter how hard you pretend otherwise.

Missing helicopter 13 July 2013, 02:15

How could Jihdists kill FSA chief? Well they did.
How could HA kill Harriri? Well they did.

Missing people-power 13 July 2013, 04:07

Exactly helicopter...... You hit the nail on the head

Thumb cityboy 13 July 2013, 10:13

If you are directing your comment at Flamethrower you are truelly mistaken, FT has never said that the FSA were a bunch of terrorists. He said their revolt against the syrian regime was overtaking by the terrorist nusra boys (backed by the west) long time ago, the FSA is used as a symbolic front to satisfy western consumption and sympathy. This is no longer about regime change, its about destroying syria as a nation much to the liking of the west, israel, Turkey and the Saudi rulers.

Missing zahle_night 12 July 2013, 21:43

Good point VINCENT!!

Thumb daytime 13 July 2013, 01:04

Why I'm not surprised? The rebels have no idea what's coming next! These Al-Qaeda terrorist will stop at nothing to have full control of the North by all means.

Missing --karim_m2 13 July 2013, 01:18

LOL, so now FSA-Al Qaeda is fighting against itself? They got bored of massacring unarmed, defenseless civilians and now decided to kill each other and eat each other's organs?

And I love how this article desperately attempts to make a distinction between the FSA and Al Qaeda. Hello, they're the exact same thing! They're both suicide-bombing terrorists!

Missing greatpierro 13 July 2013, 04:10

give us evidence of the fact that FSA and Qaeda affiliated militias are the same.

Thumb justice 13 July 2013, 04:59

because he says so

Missing helicopter 13 July 2013, 02:16

I like that theory, Baath is capable of lots of tricks.

Missing helicopter 13 July 2013, 02:18

Almost similar to the Mustaqbal/HA marriage, with Harriri being the FSA chief and HA the Jihadists..

Default-user-icon Sigamundo Fyordaj (Guest) 13 July 2013, 02:56

The Sannis, all affected by the genetic mutation known as Sannis Lunaticus Berserki from the days or Moawiya Bin Laden and his son Yazid Bin Laden, are under its spell and so they kill, kill, kill and kill people of other sects and religions. However, at times they kill their own in their rare free time between killings as target practice. takbir.

Missing greatpierro 13 July 2013, 04:07

FY, this is what should have been done by the regime a long time ago but instead Bashar chose to fire on civilians demonstrating for 6 months before the rebellion took arms. When senior regime men (including Asef Chawkat) wanted to go that way, they were killed in a bomb attack that many analysts have attributed to the Iran regime. Iran is now controlling Syria with puppet Bashar and that explains why Hizbullah, the Basij, the Irakian chiite brigades are now fighting in Syria preventing any peaceful solution in the near future.
What Iran is doing in Syria it is doing the same in Irak. Iran is putting all its weight with its political allies in Irak to prevent power sharing and compromise between shia and sunnis.

Missing beirutbastard 13 July 2013, 06:11

Karim you're retarded.

Thumb jabal10452 13 July 2013, 12:56

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