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Al-Qaida-linked group releases U.S.-trained Syrian rebels

Xinhua, August 16, 2015 Adjust font size:

The al-Qaida-linked Nusra Front has released a number of U.S.-trained rebels it captured earlier, a monitor group reported on Sunday.

The Nusra Front militants released seven rebels of the so-called 30th Division, but kept the group's commander, Colonel Nadim al-Hasan, in custody, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights cited a statement by the 30th Division group as saying.

Last July, the rebels' 30th Division, part of the West-backed Free Syrian Army (FSA), said their leader and his comrades were snatched by the Nusra Front in the northern countryside of Syria's northern province of Aleppo, according the statement.

The U.S.-trained group said it calls on the "brothers in the Nusra Front" to release the colonel along with his comrades to "prevent the bloodletting among the Muslims and to preserve the unity of line in the face of side disputes."

In June, U.S. official said the first unit of the FSA, which was trained by the United States to fight the Islamic State (IS) group, had crossed into Syria from the training camps in neighboring Jordan, according to the Washington Post.

The fighters, numbering about several dozen, are among the first to be trained by the United States, which announced it was going to train "vetted" and "moderate" rebels to fight the IS.

In its statement Sunday, the rebel group expressed gratitude for the release of the seven rebels, urging the Nusra Front to release the commander and others kidnapped alongside him. Endit