Middle East and Africa | The war for Syria

Jihadists on the way

Home-grown Islamists and foreign jihadists are becoming more prominent

|REYHANLI

FROM a bare house in the small Turkish town of Reyhanli, half an hour’s drive from the border with Syria, a bearded 30-year-old with glasses claims to command a fighting force of 1,820 men who have infiltrated north-western Syria. His group, which goes by the name “Strangers for a Greater Syria”, wants the country, once it is shorn of President Bashar Assad, to become an Islamic state under Sunni rule. On a table in front of him sit pots of ammonium, potassium carbonate and phosphate, bomb-making ingredients. “We won’t impose anything,” he says. “But I think most Syrians want Islamic law.”

This article appeared in the Middle East & Africa section of the print edition under the headline "Jihadists on the way"

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