A Syrian pilot shot down south of Aleppo has been captured by the al Qaeda-linked Al Nusra Front, a monitoring group has said.
Syria's military said the plane, which had been on a
reconnaissance mission, was brought down by a surface-to-air missile
fired by Islamist rebels. It said the pilot had ejected and a rescue mission was under way.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said fighters from the Al Nusra Front had taken him to one of their bases in the area.
A plume of smoke was seen as the plane caught fire, the Observatory said, before it fell into an area of highland known as Talat al-Iss.
There was no immediate comment from the Al Nusra Front.
A fragile truce has been observed in Syria for the last month, as efforts to negotiate an end to the five-year civil war continue.
But that "cessation of hostilities" does not include Islamic State and the Al Nusra Front.
The Syrian military and its allies have continued to launch attacks against them in areas they are said to occupy.
Aerial supremacy has been a major advantage enjoyed by the Syrian military.
Rebel groups have been demanding anti-aircraft weapons from foreign backers.
Last month, rebels denied a report from the Russian Defence Ministry, claiming that an anti-aircraft missile had been used to shoot down a Syrian warplane in Hama province.
Three rebel groups contacted by the Reuters news agency reiterated earlier statements that the plane had been attacked using anti-aircraft guns, not a missile.
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