Top Syrian rebel leader killed in air strike

The commander of one of the most effective rebel forces battling Syria’s government has been killed in an air strike, his group announced Friday

Zahran Alloush, commander of Jaysh al-Islam, was killed in eastern Ghouta, a suburb of Damascus, the rebels said.

The group made Abu Homam Essam al-Boudani the new commander, Jaysh al-Islam announced in a video message.

Alloush and four senior-level officers were killed Thursday when their high-level meeting was bombed by warplanes, the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

It is unclear whether the Syrian military or Russian planes carried out the strike, the group said. Syria’s state-run news agency, SANA, reported it was a Syrian special operation.

Syria’s state-run news agency praised the 44-year-old’s death saying “the terrorist Alloush was killed during air raids on terror dens.”

The military chief was a jailed Salafi activist, who after his release from prison in 2011 established a rebel battalion to overthrow the government of President Bashar al-Assad.

The group rose to prominence when it claimed a July 2012 bombing on National Security Headquarters in Damascus that killed a number of top government officials.

When ISIS took parts of Syria, Alloush and his group countered their expansion in some suburbs of Damascus.

Earlier this year, Jaysh al-Islam released a video showing their fighters in orange jumpsuits executing ISIS prisoners.

Alloush has long-been accused of receiving Saudi funding from Salafi fundamentalists.

Jaysh al-Islam, whose fighters number in the thousands, participated earlier this month in the Riyadh conference, which laid the ground work for future Saudi-led peace talks.

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