The Islamic State group killed more than 160 Syrian government troops
seized in recent fighting, posting pictures of terrified young
conscripts stripped down to their underwear before meeting their deaths
in the arid Syrian countryside.
The images of the slayings that emerged Thursday were the latest
massacre attributed to the extremist group, which has terrorized rivals
and civilians alike with widely publicized brutality in Syria and Iraq
as it seeks to expand a proto-state it has carved out on both sides of
the border.
In southern Syria, meanwhile, gunmen detained 43 U.N. peacekeepers
during fighting on the Syrian side of the Golan Heights, the United
Nations said. It added that another 81 peacekeepers were trapped in the
area by heavy clashes between rebels and Syrian troops.
The mass killing of Syrian soldiers is part of a stepped up campaign by
Islamic State militants targeting President Bashar Assad's forces. Until
recently, the group had been focused on eliminating rivals among the
rebels fighting to topple him, systematically routing Western-backed
opposition fighters and other Islamic factions from towns and villages
in northern and eastern Syria as it expands.
More recently, the jihadists have turned their attention to Assad's
forces, seizing a series of military bases in northeastern Raqqa
province. In the process, they have killed hundreds of pro-government
forces, beheading some and later displaying their severed heads on poles
and fences and posting the pictures online.
Most of the dozens killed over the past 24 hours were rounded up
Wednesday near the Tabqa air base, three days after Islamic State
fighters seized the base. The government troops were among a large group
of soldiers from the base who were stuck behind front lines after the
airfield fell to the jihadi fighters.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said around 120
captive government troops from Tabqa were killed near the base. Islamic
State fighters also killed at least another 40 soldiers, most of whom
were taken prisoner in recent fighting at other bases in the Hamrat
region near Raqqa city, the group's stronghold.
A statement posted online and circulated on Twitter claimed the
extremists killed about 200 government prisoners captured near Tabqa. It
also showed photographs of what it said were the prisoners: young men
stripped down to their underwear marching in the desert, some with their
hands behind their heads. The photos could not immediately be verified,
but correspond to other AP reporting.
The group also posted a video showing Islamic State fighters forcing the
barefoot men to march through the desert. Another video later showed
dozens of bodies piled in the desert, alongside others lying motionless —
apparently dead — in a row in the sand.
While the videos could not be independently confirmed by the AP, they
appeared to illustrate the claims made online by the Islamic State group
and Syrian opposition activists about the mass killing.
There was no immediate comment from the Syrian government, which has
been tight-lipped on the massive death toll incurred by its soldiers at
the hands of Islamic State fighters in the past two months.
In its rise to prominence over the past year, the extremist group has
frequently published graphic photos and videos of everything from
bombings and beheadings to mass killings and images of jihadis taunting
and humiliating terrified troops or other opponents.
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