Gruesome video
footage, which has sparked international condemnation, shows Khalid al-Hamad
taking a bite from the heart.
US-based group Human
Rights Watch says he then urges his followers to do the same to Alawites - the
Muslim sect that Syrian president Bashar al-Assad belongs to.
Time magazine says it
has talked by Skype with Hamad.
It says Hamad claimed
he was driven to the gruesome acts by footage on the dead soldier's mobile
phone, showing him "humiliating" a naked woman and her two daughters.
The US magazine says
Hamad described participating in other acts of mutilating regime forces,
including militiamen known as shabiha.
"Hopefully we
will slaughter all of them," he told the magazine, referring to Alawites.
"They were the
ones who killed our children in Baba Amr and raped our women," he said,
referring to a neighbourhood of the central city of Homs.
"We didn't start
it, they started it.
"Our slogan is an
eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth."
'Atrocious act'
UN Human Rights
Commissioner Navi Pillay calls it a "truly atrocious act".
She has urged the UN
Security Council - where Russia and the US are at loggerheads - to refer the
conflict to the International Criminal Court so all sides guilty of war crimes
can be prosecuted.
"While it is not
yet possible to fully authenticate the video, I urge the armed opposition
groups in Syria must do everything in their power to halt such gross
crimes," she said.
"They must
investigate this incident along with other alleged very serious violations by
opposition fighters, including acts of torture and a succession of apparent
summary executions and extra-judicial killings."
The National
Coalition, the country's main opposition group, issued a statement saying it
"strongly condemns" the act.
It says the rebel
soldier will be put on trial.
The United States has
denounced the actions of the rebel but insists it was the act of a lone brutal
individual.
"We're appalled
by this video and we've been very clear that all sides in this conflict must
abide by international humanitarian law," State Department spokesman
Patrick Ventrell told reporters.
He says Washington has
"raised this gruesome act in our recent conversations with leaders of the
Supreme Military Council, who assured us that they do not support such actions
and that this is not representative of the vast majority of the armed
opposition".
He also says the rebel
had been "previously ejected" from his unit "because of his
history of brutality".
Toll rises
The pro-opposition Syrian
Observatory for Human Rights has revised its death toll in the country's civil
war from 82,000 two days ago, to more than 94,000.
It says the updated
figure comes after receiving new information from regime-controlled areas
inside Syria.
Meanwhile, Russian
president Vladimir Putin is warning against any moves that could
"shake" or further destabilise the conflict in Syria.
Mr Putin issued the
warning in Moscow after talks with visiting Israeli prime minister Benjamin
Netanyahu.
Israel launched a
series of air strikes against regime targets in Syria last week, prompting both
concern and support from the international community.
Mr Netanyahu has also
expressed concerns about Russian plans to sell an advanced anti-aircraft system
to the Syrian government.

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