The
U.S. military said on Wednesday he was killed in an operation
carried out by the rebel Free Syrian Army (FSA) in the southern
Deraa province.
The province was brought under the control of the Syrian army
following Russian-brokered reconciliation agreements in 2018
that gave control of southern Syria back to Damascus.
Quraishi and his aides had been discovered in a secret hideout
in a house, said the sources, who included SFA fighters,
relatives of comrades who died in the clash and residents of
Jasem.
"The leader and a companion blew themselves up with suicide
belts after our fighters succeeded in storming their hideout,"
said Salem al Horani, a resident of Jasem and former fighter who
participated in the siege of the three houses where the IS cell
was discovered.
The FSA had received backing from the West and Gulf states until
they withdrew support in 2018, but its fighters remained in the
area after the reconciliation deals under which they handed over
heavy weapons but were allowed to keep light arms.
Islamic State has selected Abu al-Hussein al-Husseini al-Quraishi
as its new leader, a spokesman for the group said in a
recording. He did not offer further details on the new leader.
The spokesman said Quraishi was killed while "fighting enemies
of God", without elaborating.
Islamic State emerged from the chaos of the civil war in
neighbouring Iraq and took over vast swathes of Iraq and Syria
in 2014. Former IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared an
Islamic caliphate from a mosque in the northern Iraqi city of
Mosul that year and proclaimed himself caliph of all Muslims.
Islamic State's brutal rule, during which it killed and executed
thousands of people in the name of its narrow interpretation of
Islam, came to an end in Mosul when Iraqi and international
forces defeated the group there in 2017.
It then lost its last sliver of territory in neighbouring Syria
in the spring of 2019, but maintains sleeper cells in various
provinces that wage hit-and-run attacks.
(Reporting by Suleiman Al-Khalidi; Editing by Simon
Cameron-Moore and Alex Richardson)
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