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Jordan's Queen Rania holds a placard during a demonstration on February 6, 2015 in the capital Amman to express solidarity with the pilot murdered by Daesh. Image Credit: AFP

Amman: The burning alive of a Jordanian pilot by Daesh is a “turning point” in the kingdom’s fight against the militants, a minister said in remarks published on Saturday.

Air strikes carried out so far by Jordan’s air force were “the beginning of an ongoing process to eliminate” Daesh, Interior Minister Hussain Majali said, quoted by government newspaper Al Rai.

Amman said its warplanes launched dozens of strikes on Thursday against the extremist group after threatening a harsh response to the murder of pilot Muath Al Kaseasbeh.

Daesh said the strikes near its self-proclaimed capital of Raqqa killed US aid worker Kayla Jean Mueller, who was kidnapped in August 2013, but the United States said there was no proof to support the claim.

Majali said the Jordanian air strikes that destroyed the “terrorist” group’s facilities, arms depots and training centres on Thursday were the start of a campaign to “wipe them out completely”.

“The state of Jordan is entitled to retaliate against this terrorist organisation, and we will pursue it wherever it is,” he told Al Rai.

“History shows that Jordan never forgets to avenge [such attacks], no matter how long it takes... we have the resources to deal with this.

“The day of the hero, martyr pilot’s assassination is a turning point in Jordan’s history in order to face this horrific crime that was committed by the cowardly terrorist organisation,” said the minister.

Jordan is part of the US-led coalition battling Daesh, which has seized swathes of territory in Syria and Iraq and imposed an extreme interpretation of Islam on the areas under its control.

It said it had expanded its air strikes to Iraq, after the group released a video online last week showing its militants burning alive Kaseasbeh, who was captured when his F-16 fighter jet went down during a mission over Syria.