Russian strikes Saturday on a prison complex run by
Al-Qaeda's Syrian affiliate in the country's northwest killed at least 39
people, including five civilians, a monitoring group said.
The
building housed the group's religious court and a jail.
Most of
those killed were rebels imprisoned by Al-Nusra, while other victims included
prison guards and Al-Nusra fighters.
Russian warplanes have been conducting air strikes against the Islamic State organisation and "other terrorist groups" in Syria since September 30.
Although Al-Nusra and IS are both jihadist organisations, they are fierce rivals and regularly clash in Syria.
Al-Nusra
also has tense relationships with non-jihadist rebel groups that oppose its
extreme interpretation of Islamic law.
The Army of Conquest coalition has expelled regime forces from Idlib province.
The Britain-based Observatory has an extensive network of sources inside Syria and identifies casualties by the type of aircraft flown and the munitions used.
Syria's
conflict first erupted with anti-government demonstrations in March 2011 but
quickly morphed into a war that has left more than 260,000 people dead.
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