Beirut: A German former rapper who joined jihadists fighting in Syria has been killed in a suicide bombing carried out by rival fighters, jihadist sources and a monitor said on Tuesday.

Denis Mamadou Cuspert, who rapped under the name Deso Dogg but took on the name Abu Talha Al Almani in Syria, was reported to have been killed in a suicide attack on Sunday in an eastern province.

He was a member of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isil) and was reportedly killed in a double suicide bombing carried out by Al Nusra Front, a rival jihadist group that is Al Qaida’s Syria affiliate.

Messages posted on jihadist internet forums announced his death.

“The Islamic nation is bleeding with the news of the martyrdom of the jihadist fighter, brother Abu Talha Al Almani. May he be accepted by God,” one message read.

“His death is the result of a suicide bombing carried out by the traitorous soldiers of (Al Nusra chief Abu Mohammad Al) Jolani against a house in which a number of Isil brothers were staying,” it added.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a British-based monitoring group, also reported the suicide attack carried out on Sunday.

“Two members of Al Nusra Front blew themselves up the day before yesterday, killing 16 Isil fighters,” Observatory director Rami Abdul Rahman said.

Abdul Rahman said a fighter known as Abu Talha was among those killed in the attack in Deir Al Zor province near the boundary with Hasakeh province.

Since early January, Isil has been in open combat with Al Nusra and other Islamist and moderate rebel groups, who accuse it of abuses against rival opposition fighters as well as civilians.

Both Isil and Al Nusra have reportedly targeted each other with suicide attacks.

The role of Al Almani — Arabic for “The German” — in Syria attracted widespread attention and he appeared in multiple videos and photos promoting the jihadist fight in Syria.

In September 2013, he was reported to have been wounded in a regime air strike on a home where he was staying.

Thousands of jihadists, including many from Western nations, have streamed into Syria to join the fight against President Bashar Al Assad.

Many Syrians initially welcomed the foreign fighters, but Isil has faced a backlash and even been criticised by Al Qaida chief Ayman Al Zawahiri, who has urged the group to leave Syria and return to Iraq.