"ISIL on Monday seized control of the town of Al-Bab, northeast of Aleppo city, and took dozens of civilians and fighters prisoner," said Rami Abdel Rahman of the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
"The jihadists called via loudspeakers on the minarets of local mosques for residents to hand over their weapons because ISIL had come to apply Islamic law," he told AFP.
The
town has been out of regime control for more than a year, but came
under fierce aerial bombardment by government troops at the weekend.
The two-day wave of air strikes killed 50 people, said the Observatory.Elsewhere in the province, the Observatory said the rebel groups battling ISIL were progressing in the town of Jarabulus, near the Turkish border.
"Overnight, fighting continued in Jarabulus between ISIL and the Islamic Front and other rebel groups, with the latter progressing," the Observatory said.
The fighting in Jarabulus had resumed after a deadline given by rebels for ISIL fighters to withdraw from the city passed without them leaving.
Fighting between ISIL and opposition forces also erupted again in the northwestern province of Idlib, where the rebels were progressing, and in Raqa, a northern ISIL stronghold where the jihadist group has largely held off rebels.
The Observatory said ISIL had executed 46 Islamists from the Ahrar al-Sham in an ambush in Kantari, 80 kilometres (50 miles) north of Raqa city.
The group also killed 14 prisoners in Homs province on Monday, the Observatory said.
Jihadist foreign fighters were widely welcomed by Syrian rebels when they first entered the conflict, but have experienced a backlash against their reported abuses of civilians and rival rebels.
On
Sunday, ISIL in Raqa accused opposition forces of fighting against it
to please the West and other "apostate" nations before a scheduled peace
conference in Switzerland this month.
Syria's regime and opposition are scheduled to hold talks in the town of Montreux beginning on January 22.
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