Beirut: Syrian government forces apparently executed at least 15 prisoners in the city of Idlib before Islamist fighters overran the provincial capital, a monitor said on Sunday.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the bodies of at least 15 detainees had been found after the northwestern city was taken by a coalition of forces including Al Qaida’s Syrian affiliate Al Nusra Front.
“The number of bodies found in a military intelligence detention facility in Idlib city has risen to 15,” the Britain-based group’s director Rami Abdel Rahman told AFP.
The group had earlier reported the discovery of at least nine bodies believed to be prisoners executed by regime forces before they withdrew from the city.
Al Nusra released a video on Twitter showing fighters from the group discovering the bodies in a prison in Idlib.
At least nine bodies of prisoners were visible in a single dark cell, five of them lying side-by-side, and several partially covered in blood.
It was unclear how the men had been killed.
The discovery came after a coalition of Islamist fighters seized full control of Idlib on Saturday, on the fifth day of fighting for the city.
The grouping, known as the Army of Conquest, brings together militants from Al Nusra with Islamist allies including the powerful Ahrar Al Sham organisation.
The capture of Idlib makes the city only the second provincial capital in Syria to have fallen from regime control, after the March 2013 loss of Raqqa city.
Raqqa was captured by various rebel groups that were subsequently ousted from the city by Daesh.
Daesh has since made the city the de facto Syrian headquarters of its so-called Islamic “caliphate” which it has declared in territory under its control in Syria and Iraq.
With Idlib’s capture, Al Nusra and its allies control most of the northwestern province, though regime forces maintain a presence in two additional cities, as well as the Abu Duhur military airport and several military bases in the region.
Last November, Al Nusra and allied forces ousted a series of Western-backed rebel groups from Idlib after announcing plans to establish an Islamic “emirate” that analysts say is intended to rival Daesh’s “caliphate”.
The city’s capture was welcomed by the main opposition National Coalition, which said it represented “an important victory on the road to the full liberation of Syrian territory”.
Without making reference to the composition of the forces that captured Idlib, the Coalition said it had “confidence” that they would protect civilians and abide by international law.
It said Idlib’s capture only reinforced the need for international action to defend against regime aerial attacks.