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Syrian rebel, friend of Al Qaeda leader, killed by rival fighters

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Syrian rebel, friend of Al Qaeda leader, killed by rival fighters

The Observatory for Human Rights in Syria said Abu Khaled Al Soury was killed along with six comrades by Al Qaeda splinter group the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.

Published: Mon 24 Feb 2014, 2:09 AM

Updated: Sat 4 Apr 2015, 5:13 AM

  • By
  • (Reuters)

A Syrian rebel commander who fought alongside Al Qaeda founder Osama bin Laden and was close to its current chief, Ayman Al Zawahiri, was killed by a suicide attack on Sunday, intensifying infighting between rival fighters.

The Observatory for Human Rights in Syria said Abu Khaled Al Soury, also known as Abu Omair Al Shamy, a commander of the Salafi group Ahrar Al Sham was killed along with six comrades by Al Qaeda splinter group the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). It said Al Soury had fought in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Al Soury’s death will fuel the infighting among rebels fighting President Bashar Al Assad, a violent rivalry that has killed hundreds of fighters in recent months, rebels said.

Two rebels said that five ISIL members had entered Ahrar Al Sham headquarters in Aleppo, engaged its fighters and then one ISIL fighter blew himself up.

“Shaikh Abu Khaled was an important jihadi figure, he fought the Americans in Iraq and in Afghanistan. They (ISIL) gave the Americans a present, a free gift, by killing him,” said a Syrian rebel close to the group.

“He was a very important commander, he is a close friend of Sheikh Ayman (Al Zawahiri) and he knew Sheikh Bin Laden.”

Syrian rebels mourning Al Soury posted his picture on social media accounts. A fighter called for revenge saying that ISIL had “pushed it too far this time”.

Al Soury was born in Aleppo in 1963. A senior rebel source said he had been based in Afghanistan but was sent by Zawahiri to Syria a few months ago on a mission to try to end the infighting.

Sources said that, by killing Al Soury, ISIL had taken the war between rebel factions to a new level, and that the decision to kill him must have been taken by the high command of ISIL, most probably its leader Abu Bakr Al Baghdadi, who fell out last year with Zawahiri and the leader of the Syrian Al Qaeda group the Al Nusra Front.

“Sheikh Abu Khaled was influential among the rebels, especially among the ISIL fighters. He was the only one who could make them change their minds and stop the fighting,” another source said.

ISIL, which has attracted many foreign militants to its ranks, is a small but powerful force that emerged from the Sunni Islamist insurgency in neighbouring Iraq. In Syria, it has alienated many people by imposing harsh rulings against dissent in areas it controls.

Several Islamist rebel factions joined forces in January for an offensive to try to push their ISIL former allies out of rebel-held regions in northern and eastern Syria.

Sources close to Ahrar Al Sham said that Al Soury had rejected the infighting and opposed fighting ISIL. In an audiotape last year, Zawahiri appointed Al Soury as his man to mediate between rebel groups to end the fighting.



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