Several Syrian rebel groups, including a powerful al-Qaida-linked 
faction, said Wednesday they reject the authority of the Western-backed 
opposition coalition, as U.N. inspectors returned to the country to 
continue their probe into chemical weapons attacks.
In a joint statement, 13 rebel groups led by the al-Qaida-linked Nusra 
Front slammed the Turkey-based Syrian National Coalition, saying it no 
longer represents their interests.
The statement reflects the lack of unity between the political 
opposition, based in exile, and the disparate rebel groups fighting 
President Bashar Assad's regime. Syria's civil war has killed over 
100,000 people so far.
The statement also called on all those trying to topple Assad's 
government to unite under a "clear Islamic framework" — an apparent 
reference to the al-Qaida faction's aspirations to create an Islamic 
state in Syria.
It said the rebels do "not recognize" any future government formed 
outside Syria, insisting that forces fighting on the ground should be 
represented by "those who suffered and took part in the sacrifices."
Meanwhile, a team of U.N. chemical weapons arrived in Damascus on 
Wednesday to continue investigating what officials from the world 
organization have described as "pending credible allegations" of the use
 of chemical weapons in Syria's civil war.
The visit of the six-member team, led by Swedish expert Ake Sellstrom, 
follows a report by the inspectors after their previous trip in 
September, which said nerve agent sarin was used in an Aug. 21, attack 
near the capital, Damascus.
The U.S. and its allies say Assad's regime was behind the attack, and 
Washington said it killed 1,400 people. Syrian activist groups gave 
significantly lower death tolls, but still in the hundreds.
Damascus blames the rebels for the attack, and Russia, a close ally of 
Assad, said the U.N. report did not provide enough evidence to blame the
 Syrian government. It has also demanded that U.N. inspectors probe 
other attacks that allegedly included chemical agents.
The United States and Russia brokered an agreement for Syria to give up 
its chemical weapons but U.N. diplomats say they are at odds on details 
of a Security Council resolution spelling out how it should be done and 
the possible consequences if Syria doesn't comply.
In a speech at the U.N. on Tuesday, President Barack Obama challenged 
the Security Council to hold Syria accountable if it fails to live up to
 its pledges.
"If we cannot agree even on this," Obama said, "then it will show that 
the United Nations is incapable of enforcing the most basic of 
international laws."
A statement by the U.N. on Tuesday said the inspectors will use their 
new visit to gather evidence from the alleged chemical weapons attack on
 March 19 on the village of Khan al Assal outside the city of Aleppo, 
which was captured by the rebels in July.
Wednesday's rebel announcement, carried by the Britain-based Syrian 
Observatory for Human Rights, came almost two weeks after the SNC, the 
main Western-backed opposition coalition, in Turkey elected Ahmad Saleh 
Touma as the opposition's interim prime minister.
Syrian rebels have been deeply divided and clashes between rival groups 
over the past months left hundreds of people dead, mostly in northern 
and eastern Syria. Al-Qaida gunmen have been on the offensive against 
members of the more mainstream Free Syrian Army, though some of the 
groups that signed on to Wednesday's statement also belong to the FSA 
umbrella.
Syria's conflict has taken on increasingly sectarian tones in the past 
year, pitting predominantly Sunni Muslim rebels against members of 
Assad's minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.
 
 
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