ISIL beheads four men for blasphemy in Syria: Monitor

ISIL beheads four men for blasphemy in Syria: Monitor

BEIRUT - Reuters
ISIL beheads four men for blasphemy in Syria: Monitor

ISIL leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi

Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group's self-declared police force in western Syria decapitated four men after accusing them of blasphemy, a rights group monitoring the Syrian conflict said on Dec. 13. 

The men were beheaded in the countryside east of the city of Homs by the militant group's "Islamic Police", the British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said. 

The Observatory, which monitors the conflict using sources on the ground, reported a similar killing on Dec. 9, when ISIL beheaded a man in a town square in the north of the country. 

Residents and activists say ISIL has beheaded and stoned to death many people in areas it controls in Syria and Iraq for actions they see as violating their reading of Islamic law, such as adultery, homosexuality, stealing and blasphemy. 

They have also killed rival fighters by similar methods off the battlefield and have set up patrols to police public behaviour in their bid to establish a caliphate. 

The Observatory also reported on Dec. 13 that ISIL had stoned a man and a woman to death for adultery in Manbij town in northern Syria after Friday prayers. 

The group, which is the target of U.S.-led air strikes in both countries, has also killed a smaller number of foreign captives. 

The Observatory said last month that ISIL had killed 1,432 Syrians off the battlefield since the end of June when it declared a caliphate in the territory under its control.