Afrinpost
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights has learned that about 260 armed militias from the Islamic occupation of the Turkish occupation and the Muslim Brotherhood who are known as (the Syrian National Army), including leaders, have gone on the night of January 7, to Libya to fight alongside the Muslim Brotherhood militants in Libya who are known as Al-Wefaq Government Forces.
Observatory sources confirmed that all the gunmen are from the “Failaq Al-Sham” militia, the majority of whom are from Homs, and that preparations are underway to transfer 300 militants from the “Failaq Al-Sham” militia after several days to Libya.
A source inside the Islamic militias affiliated with the Turkish occupation and the Muslim Brotherhood known as the “National Army” had revealed that about 30 gunmen from the “Sultan Murad Brigade” militia had been killed in an area near the Military College in the Libyan city of Tripoli on the evening of January 5th.
And one of the media outlets loyal to the Islamic militia quoted a source familiar with the operations of sending the militants to Libya, that the killed gunmen were targeted during an ambush set up by the “Libyan National Army” forces led by Field Marshal Khalifa Haftar, at a military site near the military college where the Muslim Brotherhood was stationed affiliated with the so-called “Government of Reconciliation” led by Fayez al-Sarraj.
While one of the media outlets loyal to the Islamic militia known as the (National Army / Free Army) also acknowledged that it had obtained information about the killing of a child soldier among those militias in Libya, and the media said, quoting what family sources called, that the minor “Ahmed Al-Salem”, who was born in the middle of 2002, from the village of Hamid of “Sere Kaniye / Ras Al-Ain” occupied in northern Syria, that he was killed during the fighting in Libya, and his body will reach Turkey.
The source pointed out that the minor “Ahmed Al-Salem” worked as an armed militia within the “Sultan Murad Brigade” militia, and was killed with others who were sent to Libya, while the Observatory in turn noted that the recruitment of “mercenaries / hired killers” is a crime in accordance with the International Convention against the Recruitment, Use and Financing of Mercenaries and training them, which was issued by the United Nations about 30 years ago.