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Jihadist dies in Jordan following Syria skirmish
By Taylor Luck - May 06,2014 - Last updated at May 06,2014
AMMAN — A Jordanian jihadist died in Amman on Tuesday from wounds sustained in Syria amid a growing exodus of young Jordanians joining Syrian Islamist militias.
Abu Baker Obeideh Al Qaramseh, a 23-year-old Maan resident, died at his family’s home less than 48 hours after returning from Syria, local Islamist sources told The Jordan Times.
Qaramseh, a member of the hard-line Jihadi Salafist movement, had served alongside the Al Qaeda-linked Jabhat Al Nusra coalition in southern Syria over the past five months, according to Mohammad Shalabi, or Abu Sayyaf, head of the jihadist movement.
Qaramseh’s death brings the total number of Jordanians reportedly killed while battling Syrian regime forces alongside Islamist militants to over 200, Islamist sources say.
An increasing number of Jordanians are reportedly joining Islamist militants in Syria, with some 2,300 crossing into Syria to join jihadist groups over the past two weeks alone, according to Jordanian and Syrian Islamist sources.
Over 2,200 Jordanians are currently fighting in Syria, the vast majority reportedly serving under the banner of Jabhat Al Nusa or its rival, former Al Qaeda affiliate the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant.
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Border guards opened fire and killed an Arab national attempting to cross into Syria on Friday after he failed to respond to “repeated warnings” from security forces, according to the Jordan Armed Forces (JAF).
A leading Jordanian Salafist is currently brokering a ceasefire between rival Al Qaeda branches in Syria in a bid to end infighting that has cost thousands of lives and is dividing the global jihadist movement, Islamist sources say.