Unfortunately some people simply cannot answer the question except by  
guessing
to the effect:  "Gosh, they must be lunatic sadists,  or undisciplined 
criminals, 
or renegades from Islam."  Actually, of course, the ideas all come  from 
the Koran
where they are said to be direct commands revealed by God.
 
 
BR
 
------------------
 
 
Islamic State beheads, crucifies in push for Syria's  east
Oliver Holmes and Suleiman Al-Khalidi (Reuters, August 11,  2014) 
Beirut/Amman - Islamic State has crushed a pocket of resistance to its  
control in eastern Syria, crucifying two people and executing 23 others in the  
past five days, a monitoring group said on Monday. 
The insurgents, who are also making rapid advances in Iraq, are tightening  
their grip in Syria, of which they now control roughly a third, mostly 
rural  areas in the north and east. 
Fighters from the al-Sheitaat tribe in eastern Deir al-Zor had tried to  
resist Islamic State's advance this month, according to residents near the 
area  and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring  
organization. 
In al-Shaafa, a town on the banks of the Euphrates river, Islamic State  
beheaded two men from the al-Sheitaat clan on Sunday, the Observatory said, 
and  gave residents a 12-hour deadline on Monday to hand over members of the  
tribe. 
In other parts of Deir al-Zor province, the militants crucified two men for 
 the crime of "dealing with apostates" in the city of Mayadin, and two 
others  were beheaded for blasphemy in the nearby town of al-Bulel, the 
Observatory  said. 
Islamic State, which has fought the Syrian army, Kurdish militias and Sunni 
 Muslim tribal forces, has made rapid gains in Syria since it seized 
northern  Iraq's largest city, Mosul, on June 10, and declared an Islamic 
caliphate. 
The Observatory said a further 19 men from the al-Sheitaat tribe were  
executed on Thursday, 18 shot dead and one beheaded, on the outskirts of Deir  
al-Zor city. It said the men worked at an oil installation. 
“No one will now dare from the other tribes to move against Islamic State  
after the defeat of the al-Sheitaat,” said Ahmad Ziyada al-Qaissi, an 
Islamic  State sympathizer contacted by Skype from Mayadin. 
Tribal sources say the conflict between Islamic State and the al-Sheitaat  
tribe, who number about 70,000, flared after Islamic State took over of two 
oil  fields in July. 
One of those, al-Omar, is the biggest oil and gas field in Deir al-Zor and  
has been a lucrative source of funds for rebel groups. 
The head of the al-Sheitaat tribe, Sheikh Rafaa Aakla al-Raju, called in a  
video message for other tribes to join the fight against Islamic State. 
“We appeal to the other tribes to stand by us because it will be their turn 
 next ... If (Islamic State) are done with us the other tribes will 
targeted  after al-Sheitaat. They are the next target,” he said in the video, 
posted on  YouTube on Sunday. 
WINNING RESPECT 
A Syrian human rights activist from Deir al-Zor who fled for Turkey last 
year  said rebels opposed to President Bashar al-Assad had retreated to 
al-Sheitaat  tribal areas from which they had been trying to mount resistance 
to 
Islamic  State. 
He said, on condition of anonymity, that the resistance had been crushed in 
 the last few days. "The situation is very bad, but the people can't repel 
them,"  he said. 
He said that, in tandem with their violent campaign, Islamic State was  
distributing gas, electricity, fuel and food to garner local support. 
"It is a poor area. They are winning support this way. They won a lot of  
support this way. They are halting theft and punishing thieves. This is also  
giving them credibility." 
Another resident of Deir al-Zor, Abdullah al-Noami, said that four  
al-Sheitaat towns had fallen. 
“These areas have fallen into the hands of Islamic State after the 
withdrawal  of the (al-Sheitaat) fighters. The youths who were found were 
executed 
or their  heads were cut off on the grounds that they fought against Islamic 
State,” he  said. 
More than 170,000 people have been killed in Syria's civil war, which pits  
overwhelmingly Sunni Muslim rebels against Assad, a member of the  
Shi'ite-derived Alawite minority, backed by Shi'ite militias from Iraq and  
Lebanon. 
The insurgency is split between competing factions, with Islamic State  
emerging as the most powerful. 
In Raqqa, Islamic State's power base in Syria, its hold appears to be 
growing  only firmer even as Syrian government forces intensify air strikes on 
territory  held by the group. 
One Syrian living in an area of Islamic State control near Raqqa said the  
number of its fighters in the streets had grown dramatically in the last few 
 weeks, particularly since it captured the army's 17th Division at the end 
of  July. 
The group has levied a tax on non-Muslims, and settled foreign fighters in  
confiscated homes, said the resident, who asked for anonymity due to 
security  concerns. 
But despite that, as in Deir al-Zor, it has won a degree of respect among  
locals by curbing crime using their version law of and order. For youths 
without  work, salaries offered by Islamic State are one of the few sources of  
income. 
"The (Islamic) State has respect and standing and its voice is heard," said 
 the resident, speaking by Skype.

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