Key Syrian Islamist rebel groups say they do
not recognise any foreign-based opposition group, including the National
Coalition.
"The National Coalition and the proposed
government under [recently chosen] Ahmad Tomeh does not represent us, nor do we
recognise it," 13 of Syria's most powerful rebel groups said in a joint
statement late on Tuesday.
The groups include members of the main rebel
Free Syrian Army, as well as Liwa al-Tawhid, the main rebel force in the
northern province of Aleppo, and Jabhat al-Nusra, an al-Qaeda-linked group.
The UN Security Council blacklisted al-Nusra
Front as an alias of al-Qaeda in Iraq in May, while the US State Department had
designated the group as a terrorist organisation in December last year.
Ahrar al-Sham also signed on, as did the 19th
Division, a significant but relatively new addition to the mainstream FSA.
In their statement, they also called for
Islamic law to be applied.
"These forces call on all military and
civilian groups to unite in a clear Islamic context that... is based on sharia
[Islamic] law, making it the sole source of legislation," it said.
They called for "unity" and "to
reject division... putting the interest of the [Islamic] nation over the
interest of each group".
Rebel infighting
The statement comes amid an escalation of
violence pitting fighters from various factions across the rebel spectrum
against another al-Qaeda front group, the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant
(ISIL).
Rebel groups have increasingly been fighting
amongst themselves in recent weeks.
The ISIL, a US-designated "terrorist
organisation", announced last week it would "go to war" against
two other rebel groups in the town of al-Bab, in Aleppo governorate.
More than a dozen fighters from the group were
killed in the northern city of Hazano on Sunday, close to the border with
Turkey, during clashes with other rebels.
An uneasy truce agreed to last week temporarily
ended fighting between ISIL and the Northern Storm brigade in the town of Azaz,
near Aleppo.
ISIL and Jabhat al-Nusra have themselves come
into conflict: On Saturday, fighters from the two groups clashed in the eastern
province of Hasaka, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights,
killing at least two people.
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