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  • They changed the face of the war in Syria. They're in control of the Anbar province in

  • Iraq and Amnesty International state they've committed serious human rights abuses including

  • some amounting to war crimes but who exactly is the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant?

  • Well it's an insurgent Jihadist group active in Iraq and Syria and you may know them better

  • as ISIL or ISIS - the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham. The group was formed in 2013

  • when the Iraqi faction (formerly known as al-Qa'ida in Iraq) merged with Jabhat al-Nusra

  • -- essentially al-Qa'ida presence in Syria. The group has become the main jihadi fighting

  • force in Syria -- as well as keeping a stronghold in Iraq.

  • They're heavily armed with a strong force of foreign jihadists, and have been fighting

  • against the moderate opposition but how did they get so powerful, so fast?

  • Well 2013 put ISIS on the map in Northern Syria where it established Sharia law in various

  • towns and shocked the world with claims of detention camps, torture and public executions.

  • al-Qa'ida in Iraq's leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi released an audio statement, declaring the

  • birth of ISIS, only it wasn't quite that simple. The Jabhat al --Nusra leader Abu Muhammad

  • al-Jawlani denied this, saying neither he nor any of his men knew about such a move.

  • Then in the summer Al Jazeera reported that it had a letter written by al-Qa'ida leader

  • and Bin Laden's successor Ayman Al-Zawahiri, stating he was not in favour of the merger.

  • Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi then released an audio message rejecting Zawahiri's ruling stating

  • the merger was going ahead anyway.

  • In July ISIS claimed responsibility for the mass breakout of its imprisoned members held

  • at Iraq's infamous Abu Ghraib prison. It was reported that over 500 prisoners escaped,

  • including senior commanders of the group.

  • By September, some internet sites stated that ISIS claimed responsibility for an attack

  • in Turkey back in May. Two car bombs exploded in the town of Reyhanlı, Hatay Province,

  • killing at least 51 people and injuring 140. The attack was the deadliest single act of

  • terrorism to occur on Turkish soil.

  • The controversy over ISIS's presence in Syria continued as Ayman Al-Zawahiri apparently

  • ordered the disbanding of ISIS in an audio message aired on al-Jazeera.

  • The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights (SOHR) stated: "ISIS is the strongest group in Northern

  • Syria −100% - and anyone who tells you anything else is lying."

  • In December Amnesty International released a damning 18 page briefing report cataloguing

  • what it claims are human rights abuses carried out by ISIS. It claimed; torture, flogging

  • and summary killings are rife in secret prisons run by ISIS. Those abducted and detained include

  • children as young as eight who are held together with adults in the same "cruel and inhumane"

  • conditions. So what's happening with ISIS now and what's its future? Well in Iraq they

  • appear strong. Last week during the clashes in Anbar ISIS took control of Fallujah and

  • proclaimed it an independent Islamic state. The UN's envoy to Iraq has now warned of a

  • critical humanitarian situation in the region.

  • This week the Iraqi ministry of defense claimed that Iraq's air force carried out a successful

  • strike on ISIS sites in Ramadi. Whilst in Syria a car bomb in Darkush, Idlib was according

  • to activist sources an attack by ISIS on another rebel faction running a checkpoint and in

  • the wake of fighting between Islamist factions linked to the FSA and ISIS a demonstration

  • took place in Aleppo calling for an end to factional violence. So ISIS despite its fearsome

  • reputation and the allegations it faces is not without its enemies and of course there

  • are forces fighting against them. Moderates and Islamists trying to depose Assad are now

  • uniting to fight against ISIS in several parts of northern Syria - making true the old adage,

  • my enemy's enemy is my friend.

  • ISIS could well find that its no-holds barred approach to warfare has actually succeeded

  • in uniting its enemies against it.

  • On Wednesday Islamist rebels captured the headquarters of ISIS in Aleppo and reported

  • the discovery of apparently dozens of executed prisoners in a children's hospital used by

  • the group. And there's also the question of the ability of ISIS to sustain its campaigns

  • with defence experts asking if they're overstretched. In Anbar its reported the group has had to

  • reinforce fighters from Syria and that for the first time since they made their mark

  • - the group has been attacked by the previously weakened rebels, fighting with renewed vigour.

  • As Iraq gears up for its elections on April 30th the presence of ISIS is bound to be felt

  • but long term the future of ISIS could be as unpredictable as the nation's in which

  • they fight.

They changed the face of the war in Syria. They're in control of the Anbar province in

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