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Key Free Syria Army rebel 'killed by Islamist group' | Key Free Syria Army rebel 'killed by Islamist group' |
(35 minutes later) | |
A senior member of the Free Syrian Army is reported to have been killed by a rival rebel group linked to al-Qaeda. | A senior member of the Free Syrian Army is reported to have been killed by a rival rebel group linked to al-Qaeda. |
Kamal Hamami, of the group's Supreme Military Council, was meeting members of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant "to discuss battle plans". | Kamal Hamami, of the group's Supreme Military Council, was meeting members of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant "to discuss battle plans". |
A Free Syrian Army spokesman said he received a call from the group saying they had killed Kamal Hamami. | A Free Syrian Army spokesman said he received a call from the group saying they had killed Kamal Hamami. |
It is part of an escalating struggle within the armed uprising between moderates and Islamists. | It is part of an escalating struggle within the armed uprising between moderates and Islamists. |
The BBC's Paul Wood says a civil war within a civil war is building within the opposition as the two sides engage in a battle that is partly over the spoils and partly ideological. | The BBC's Paul Wood says a civil war within a civil war is building within the opposition as the two sides engage in a battle that is partly over the spoils and partly ideological. |
Factional fighting | Factional fighting |
Kamal Hamami, also known as Abu Basir al-Ladkani, was in charge of a key brigade within the Free Syrian Army (FSA). | |
He is believed to have met members of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant in the port city of Latakia to inform them of a planned offensive in the area, before being ambushed and shot dead. | |
"The Islamic State phoned me saying that they killed Abu Basir and that they will kill all of the Supreme Military Council," FSA spokesman Qassem Saadeddine told Reuters news agency. | |
The FSA was formed in 2011 by army deserters based in Turkey and is said to have some 40,000 members. | |
Although they have had some successes in the fight against President Assad's forces, they say they will be unable to win the war unless they acquire more sophisticated weaponry. | Although they have had some successes in the fight against President Assad's forces, they say they will be unable to win the war unless they acquire more sophisticated weaponry. |
In recent months, Western and Arab nations have agreed to step up support for moderate Syrian rebels in their battle against President Bashar al-Assad's forces. | In recent months, Western and Arab nations have agreed to step up support for moderate Syrian rebels in their battle against President Bashar al-Assad's forces. |
But many in the West are nervous about heavy weaponry falling into the hands of radical groups. | But many in the West are nervous about heavy weaponry falling into the hands of radical groups. |
Al-Qaeda in Iraq announced in April that it was merging with the Syrian Islamist group al-Nusra Front to form the single Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (the Levant). | |
The al-Nusra Front - which had gained a reputation for discipline and honesty - rejected the merger though not its allegiance to al-Qaeda. | |
The leader of al-Qaeda, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has urged its fighters to strive for an Islamic state in Syria. | The leader of al-Qaeda, Ayman al-Zawahiri, has urged its fighters to strive for an Islamic state in Syria. |
The spread of Sharia in rebel-held areas has alarmed the moderate members of the opposition, who, though Muslim, do not want a religious state. | The spread of Sharia in rebel-held areas has alarmed the moderate members of the opposition, who, though Muslim, do not want a religious state. |