IS caliphate 'illegitimate', says Al Qaeda's Syria chief
June 04, 2015  08:07
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The chief of Al Qaeda's Syria affiliate has described the rival Islamic State group's self-proclaimed caliphate as "illegitimate", in a wide-ranging television interview.

In the second part of his appearance on the Qatari-owned Al-Jazeera news channel yesterday, Al-Nusra Front leader Abu Mohamed al-Jolani criticised IS at length and said he did not foresee a reconciliation between the two jihadist groups soon.

"They announced a caliphate, but the scholars rejected it as illegitimate. It is not based on Islamic law," Jolani said, his face hidden from view by a black scarf. 

The rivalry between the two groups deepened after IS declared a caliphate spanning across Syria and Iraq in June 2014.

This conflict, Jolani said, had seen IS kill more than 700 members of Al-Nusra in a single battle, as well as women and children. 

"There is no indication of a solution between us and them at this time. We hope that they repent and return to the Sunni people," Jolani said, adding that the rivalry had allowed the Syrian regime "to flourish."

He refused to call IS fighters "infidels" -- a term usually referring to non-Muslims -- but instead said they had strayed from the path of Islam. 

"They did not commit to the orders we had... including not blowing up markets or killing people in mosques," he said.
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