Islamic
State seizes more territory in Syria: monitor
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[August 13, 2014]
BEIRUT (Reuters) - Islamic State
insurgents have seized several towns and villages from rival Islamist
groups in the Syrian province of Aleppo, opening the way for further
westward advances, an organization monitoring the war in Syria said on
Wednesday.
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Already in control of large areas of northern and eastern Syria,
Islamic State's latest gains include the towns of Turkmen Bareh and
Akhtarin, 50 km (30 miles) northeast of Aleppo, the Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights, which is based in Britain, reported.
Islamic State's advance in Syria has accelerated since the group
seized control of the Iraqi city of Mosul in June, declaring a
caliphate in areas under its control in a bid to redraw the borders
of the Middle East.
Diplomats and rebels said the Syrian government, which is fighting
rebels across the country, launched attacks on towns run by the
group only after its militants advanced into neighboring Iraq and
seized a third of its territories.
Islamic State is tightening its grip over areas of Syria under its
control, including the city of Raqqa on the Euphrates river. Raqqa
has become Islamic State's Syrian power base.
The Observatory, which uses a network of monitors, reported battles
between Islamic State fighters and Syrian government forces near a
Raqqa military airport, the government's last remaining position in
the area.
The Observatory also reported two more crucifixions by Islamic State
in Deir al-Zor overnight, bringing to 27 the number of people
executed by the group in recent days as it tightens it grip over the
eastern province.
The advance in northeast Aleppo province is part of a wider Islamic
State offensive to seize a belt of territory near the border with
Turkey.
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A Twitter feed reporting events in Akhtarin said two people had been
killed while "resisting" Islamic State's advance, including a
16-year-old boy. There was no way to verify the report.
The Observatory said it expected Islamic State's next targets to be
the towns of Azaz and Marea to the west.
It identified the groups defeated by Islamic State as fighters from
Islamist battalions that have been resisting its expansion. The
Nusra Front, al Qaeda's official affiliate in Syria, and other
Islamist groups had withdrawn from the area in June.
(Addditional reporting by Omar Fahmy in Cairo; Writing by Tom Perry;
Editing by Janet Lawrence)
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