Gunmen kidnap more than 100 civilians in Syria: NGO

NGO says the kidnappers were from Shiite-majority villages, while passengers belonged to mostly Sunni villages.


Afp February 15, 2013
The United Nations says almost 70,000 people have been killed so far in the Syrian conflict. PHOTO: AFP/FILE

BEIRUT:

 More than 100 civilians have been abducted by armed groups in the Syrian province of Idlib in separate incidents, a watchdog said on Friday, expressing alarm over what it said were "sectarian kidnappings".

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the kidnappings in the northwestern province occurred on Thursday in two separate incidents.

A group of some 70 men and women passengers on four mini-buses were abducted near an army checkpoint when travelling towards the provincial capital, also Idlib, by pro-regime armed men, said the Britain-based Observatory.

It said the kidnappers were from the Shiite-majority villages of Al-Fua and Kafraya, while the passengers hailed from the mostly Sunni villages of Saraqeb, Sarmin and Binnish.

Hours before their abduction, in the same area, another armed group kidnapped at least 40 other civilians, mostly women and children, the Observatory said.

They had been travelling on a bus from Al-Fua and Kafraya villages, it said.

Most Syrian rebels fighting troops loyal to President Bashar al-Assad are Sunni, while the president's clan belongs to an offshoot of Shiite Islam.

"I fear a rise in sectarian kidnappings," Observatory director Rami Abdel Rahman said. "Such acts are detrimental to the revolution."

The United Nations says almost 70,000 people have been killed so far in the Syrian conflict, which first erupted 23 months ago on March 15, 2011.

COMMENTS (1)

paki | 11 years ago | Reply

Revolution? How can we imagine a revolution from terrorists (Jahadists) who know nothing but terrorizing civilians and killing of every man and women who don't agree with their opinion? And sectarianism? Syria was a peaceful country before the invasion of these terrorists and so called Jahadists in 2011.

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