Sunday, August 19, 2012

"battlefield trial"

"Another group of Tawheed fighters executed four members of an Aleppan family accused of funding and running a hated pro-Assad militia accused of keeping iron-fisted control over restive areas. The division's field commander, Abdel Qader Saleh, told The Wall Street Journal that the four men were given a battlefield trial before they were killed.  Here in Qobtan Jebel, a pinprick village of century-old stone walled homes in the hills west of Aleppo, Mr. Shehab Eddin's word is law, at least for now. Before the uprising, the self-taught sheik—also known by his nom du guerre, Abu Soleiman—preached covertly to a small following in an adjacent village about the Syrian regime's ills.
The sheik's morning began when two of his fighters brought in a young man they had stopped at a checkpoint with seven jerry cans of gasoline in his car. The commodity is in short supply. The fighters suspected the man might be a smuggler. A couple quick questions satisfied the sheik, who ordered him freed with his fuel.  The next visitor pleaded for the release of a detainee accused of working as a regime informant in the village. The sheik was unmoved. "We have two witnesses and evidence against him," he said, drawing X's, O's and spiral doodles on a blank sheet of paper as he listened.  Next came a stringy youth who said he had just defected from the Syrian army. He was brusquely questioned by the sheik's aide, Ali al-Haji, a 28-year-old former tank commander with a degree in Islamic law.  The fidgety defector, 20-year-old Ahmed al-Latouf, said he had served as an army mortar man. "There's no mobiles phones, no television," he said. "No one knows anything and they believe what their officers tell them—that we are fighting criminal gangs and terrorists."" (thanks Laleh)