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POST TIME: 6 April, 2016 00:00 00 AM / LAST MODIFIED: 5 April, 2016 11:43:20 PM
Syria rebels edge towards key IS-held town Dabiq
AFP

Syria rebels edge towards key IS-held town Dabiq

The picture shows the wreckage of a government warplane after Al-Nusra front (Al-Qaeda's Syria affiliate) reportedly shot it down over the northern Syrian town of Al-Eis yesterday and captured one crew member alive. AFP photo

Rebels in Syria are edging closer to the key northern town of Dabiq held by the Islamic State group, pushing the jihadists out of more than a dozen villages, a monitor said yesterday, reports AFP.
Rebel forces are now within 10 kilometres (six miles) of Dabiq, a town of significant symbolic importance to the jihadists, said Rami Abdel Rahman, head of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
“Since mid-March, Islamist and rebel fighters backed by Turkey have seized control of a wide border area spanning 15 kilometres (10 miles),” said Abdel Rahman, whose Britain-based group relies on a wide network of sources inside Syria.
The rebel groups, including Faylaq al-Sham and the Sultan Murad Brigades, have seized 14 villages since mid-March, he said, adding that Turkish artillery fire on IS positions had bolstered the offensive.
Dabiq, a town in Syria’s Aleppo province captured by IS in August 2014, is of crucial ideological importance to the group.
The town, which according to a Sunni Muslim prophecy will be the site of an end-of-times battle between Christian forces and Muslim fighters, has become a byword and rallying cry for IS.
The group has named its English-language online magazine “Dabiq” after the town.