Daily Press

Deadly Israeli airstrikes hit in Syria’s capital, report says

- By Abby Sewell

BEIRUT — Israeli airstrikes targeted residentia­l areas in Syria’s capital Damascus early Sunday, killing at least five people and wounding 15, Syrian state news reported.

The strikes come amid a wider shadow war between Israel and its archenemy Iran, a close ally of Syria’s President Bashar Assad.

Loud explosions were heard over a central area of Damascus around 12:30 a.m. Syrian state media agency SANA reported that air defenses were “confrontin­g hostile targets in the sky around Damascus.” Citing a military source, it reported that five people had been killed, among them a soldier, and 15 civilians wounded.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, a U.K.-based war monitor, reported that 15 people, including a woman, were killed in strikes targeting sites connected with Iranian militias and the Lebanese militant group Hezbollah. The group said the strikes hit sites in the capital’s Kafr Sousa neighborho­od, including an Iranian school there, and outlying areas of the city.

There was no immediate statement from Israel on the attack. A spokespers­on for the Israeli military declined to comment.

Samer Abdo, an engineer living on an upscale street in Kafr Sousa that was struck by missiles, was picking through shattered glass and broken wood in his apartment Sunday morning. Abdo said his family had woken up in terror to the building shaking.

“We thought at first that it was an earthquake like the one that happened two weeks ago,” he said.

An official with an Iranbacked group, speaking on the condition of anonymity, denied media reports that the strike on Kafr Sousa targeted Iranian or Palestinia­n officials. The strike hit a parking garage under a building and killed 10 civilians and troops all of them Syrians, he said. He denied that there had been any Iranians or Hezbollah members killed.

An official with the Palestinia­n Islamic Jihad, an

Iran-backed militant group, warned Israel in a statement Sunday that there would be “a decisive response without delay to any assassinat­ion attempt (on) the leaders of the resistance,” and in particular its senior official Akram “Abu Mohamad” Ajouri, whose home in Damascus has previously been targeted by airstrikes.

Israeli airstrikes often target sites in the vicinity of Damascus, but it is rare for them to target residentia­l areas in the city. The Saturday night strikes were the first since a devastatin­g 7.8 magnitude earthquake hit Turkey and Syria on Feb. 6.

Syria’s foreign ministry condemned the attack, coming “at a time when Syria was healing its wounds, burying its martyrs, and receiving condolence­s, sympathy, and internatio­nal humanitari­an support in the face of the devastatin­g earthquake.”

It called on the United Nations Security Council to condemn it.

Iran’s semioffici­al Tasnim news agency said Sunday that no Iranian nationals were harmed in the strike on Damascus.

 ?? LOUAI BESHARA/GETTY-AFP ?? A woman is helped as she walks through rubble in the aftermath of a reported Israeli airstrike Sunday in Damascus, Syria, that caused at least five deaths.
LOUAI BESHARA/GETTY-AFP A woman is helped as she walks through rubble in the aftermath of a reported Israeli airstrike Sunday in Damascus, Syria, that caused at least five deaths.

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