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World / Middle East

Members of peaceful group killed in US Syria airstrike

Published: 18 Mar 2017 - 11:03 am | Last Updated: 12 Nov 2021 - 01:02 am
Civil defense units and people try to rescue victims who were trapped under the debris of a mosque after war crafts belonging to USA carried out series of airstrikes during night prayer in Al-Jineh village of Atarib district in Aleppo, Syria on March 17,

Civil defense units and people try to rescue victims who were trapped under the debris of a mosque after war crafts belonging to USA carried out series of airstrikes during night prayer in Al-Jineh village of Atarib district in Aleppo, Syria on March 17,

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ALEPPO, Syria: Casualties from a deadly U.S. airstrike that destroyed a mosque in Aleppo city were mostly members of Tablighi Jamaat, a non-extremist group.

On Thursday night, a U.S. warplane struck a mosque in the village of Al-Jina west of Aleppo city, killing at least 58 people.

But according to local sources at the scene, most of those killed by the strike were members of Tablighi Jamaat, a peaceful, non-political Sunni movement.

Aleppo’s western countryside is home to a small community of Tablighi Jamaat adherents who had held regular meetings each Thursday night in the village’s ill-fated Omar Mosque.

According to local sources, Thursday night’s airstrike largely reduced the mosque to rubble. Local officials put the number of people inside the mosque when it came under attack at between 200 and 300.

“We arrived at the scene about five minutes after the strike,” local civil defense official Mustafa Ebeid told Anadolu Agency.

“We found many people lying on the ground,” he said. “Many were missing body parts.”

Ebeid quoted local eyewitnesses as saying that the mosque was struck by three missiles before a fourth targeted those trying to leave the building.

Tablighi Jamaat was established in India in 1927 by Muhammad Ilyas. Group adherents live mainly in India, Pakistan and Bangladesh, but small Tablighi Jamaat communities can also be found in some Arab countries.

The group is known for its avoidance of politics and rejection of violence.

In a Friday statement, the U.S. Central Command (CENTCOM) claimed responsibility for the deadly raid without confirming or denying that the mosque had been deliberately targeted.

According to CENTCOM, the strike had targeted Al-Qaeda members.