The Free
Syrian Army has reportedly threatened to execute its Iranian hostages if the
Assad government does not free rebel prisoners within 48 hours. The group says
the hostages are Iranian government troops, but Iran claims they are pilgrims.
A
brigade from the Free Syrian Army (FSA) known as the Bar’a released a video
aired on Al-Arabiya in which they warned they would execute an Iranian prisoner
“for each martyr who is killed.”
The
militia group kidnapped 48 Iranians at the beginning of August, claiming that
they were members of the elite Iranian Revolutionary Guards. However, the
Iranian government says they are pilgrims on their way to visit a shrine in
southeast Damascus and has appealed to Qatar and Turkey to help free the
hostages.
Iran
admitted in September that it had posted members of the Guard in Syria, working
as “high-level advisors.”
In an
interview with Al-Arabiya the commander of the Bar’a said that the 48 hostages
were part of a group of 150 troops sent by Iran for “reconnaissance on the
ground.”
Although
this is not the first time the Free Syrian Army has taken hostages. Back in
February the group sequestered eleven Iranian pilgrims and five Iranian
technicians in the flashpoint city of Homs in December.
This is
the first occasion when they have threatened to execute their prisoners if
their demands are not met. This new aggressive stance taken by the militant
group is more reminiscent of tactics employed by Al-Qaeda.
An
independent UN panel confirmed earlier in September that a number of “foreign
elements” and “jihadists” were found to be operating in Syria. It was the first
report in which they conceded that outside terrorists had joined the conflict.
The
panel said that the presence of such elements would “push anti-government
fighters towards more radical positions.”
The
Assad regime has continually branded the opposition forces in Syria as armed
terrorists and decried the West and some of its Gulf neighbors for offering
support to the rebel forces.
Syria’s
Foreign Minister Walid al-Moallem addressed the UN last week accusing countries
such as the US, Saudi Arabia, Qatar and Turkey for supporting the opposition's
"terrorism." Walid decried these countries for prolonging the Syrian
conflict and condemned the calls for Syrian President Bashar al-Assad to step
down.
"This
terrorism which is externally supported is accompanied by unprecedented media
provocation based on igniting religious extremism sponsored by well-known
states in the region," he told the UN General Assembly.
He went
on to accuse Western powers of promoting instability in Syria to create a
premise for foreign military intervention.
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