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		  following news reports are summaries from original sources. They may 
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		Syrian Rebel Group Names Hashem Al-Shaikh 
		New Leader After Deadly Blast  September 10, 2014
 
		 AFP, Sylvia Westall | ReutersArab News, Wednesday 10 September 
		2014
 BEIRUT, Lebanon :
 An image grab taken from an online propaganda video of Syria's 
		Islamic Front shows the new leader of Ahrar al-Sham group, Hashem 
		al-Sheikh, known as Abu Jaber, speaking at an undisclosed location in 
		Syria. Ahrar al-Sham named new chiefs on Wednesday after a devastating 
		blast that killed nearly 30 members of its leadership in northeastern 
		Idlib province. The new head of the Islamist group Ahrar Al-Sham, once one of the 
		strongest militias in the Syrian civil war, has urged fellow insurgents 
		to fight on after a blast on Tuesday wiped out its senior leadership.In a video on YouTube, Ahrar Al-Sham said Hashem Al-Sheikh, also known 
		as “Abu Jaber,” had been named its new leader and Abu Saleh Tahan its 
		new military chief. Another video showed a man identified as Abu Jaber 
		exhorting his men to fight on.
 Among those killed in the explosion in 
		northwestern Syria was Ahrar Al-Sham’s former leader Hassan Aboud, said 
		the group which is part of the Islamic Front alliance fighting both the 
		Syrian army and the now dominant Islamic State movement.
 The Syrian 
		Observatory for Human Rights, a group monitoring the conflict, said the 
		blast killed 28 of Ahrar Al-Sham’s commanders, dealing a major blow to 
		the organization that is believed to have received funds from Gulf 
		states.
 “Jihadi men of our nation ... do not let the crisis shake you 
		or the calamity divide you,” Abu Jaber said on the video while 
		eulogizing the dead. “Rise, let us die for what they have died for,” he 
		said in a statement read from behind a desk.
 Some 50 of the group’s 
		leaders had gathered at a house when the blast went off inside, 
		according to the Observatory. There has been no claim of responsibility 
		for the blast, which took place in Syria’s Idlib province.
 Some 
		observers have described Tuesday’s incident as a gas attack. Abu Baraa, 
		a rebel figure from a group allied with Ahrar Al-Sham, said a doctor who 
		examined the bodies said there was little visible sign of external 
		injuries.
 The doctor saw bodies with frothing at the mouth and fluid 
		coming from the eyes and noses, Abu Baraa said, adding the group had 
		been meeting in a heavily fortified underground bunker.
 “This was a 
		highly sophisticated attack in a location that was very secure,” he 
		said. Photos posted on social media claiming to show the victims of the 
		attack displayed bodies that did not appear to have significant external 
		injuries.
 Other reports suggested the victims had died from smoke 
		inhalation. It was not possible to independently verify any of the 
		reports or pictures or the cause of the deaths.
 
 'Crippling blow'
 The Hague-based Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons 
		(OPCW) said in a statement on Wednesday it had found “compelling 
		evidence” that chlorine gas was used “systematically and repeatedly” as 
		a weapon in northern Syria this year.
 President Bashar Assad agreed 
		to hand over his chemical weapons stocks for destruction as part of a 
		deal that averted threatened US military strikes, but the continued 
		attacks have led to accusations he had not fully declared his arsenal.
 The loss of its senior leadership has come at a significant time for 
		Ahrar Al-Sham, said Charles Lister, visiting fellow at the Brookings 
		Doha Center.
 “This potentially crippling blow comes during a period 
		in which Ahrar Al-Sham’s senior officials have begun adopting more 
		moderate stances in Syria, including considering joining larger moderate 
		coalitions,” he wrote in an analysis.
 “The gutting of Ahrar Al-Sham’s 
		leadership will have major ripple effects in the opposition,” researcher 
		Aron Lund wrote on the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace’s 
		Syria website.
 “Unless Ahrar Al-Sham somehow manages to recover and 
		sustain its relevance as a major Islamist faction, the Islamic Front may 
		now be beyond repair,” he wrote.
 Some supporters of the rival group 
		Islamic State celebrated Aboud’s death on social media, saying that 
		Syria had been “cleansed” of his presence.
 In January another senior 
		Ahrar Al-Sham leader was killed in a suicide attack. Abu Khaled Al-Soury 
		had fought alongside Al-Qaeda founder Osama Bin Laden and was close to 
		its current chief Ayman Al-Zawahri.
 Islamic State, also known as 
		ISIL, had denied involvement in the January attack after being blamed 
		for it.
 Ahrar Al-Sham, which has advocated Sharia law in Syria, was 
		once considered among the strongest insurgent groups in the civil war 
		but has since been overtaken by Islamic State.
 The radical Islamic 
		State group has seized wide swaths of Syria and Iraq and views other 
		Islamist groups as its rivals.
 US Secretary of State John Kerry 
		arrived in Baghdad on Wednesday as part of a tour of the Middle East 
		aimed at building military, political and financial support to defeat 
		Islamic State.
 
 (Additional reporting by Suleiman Al-Khalidi in 
		Amman and Ahmed Tolba in Cairo)
 
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