Imperial Valley Press

11 killed in blasts inside Syria weapons warehouse

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PARIS (AP) — Blasts set off by an explosion at a weapons warehouse in central Syria killed 11 people and wounded dozens Friday, a war monitor said, amid soaring tensions between regional archenemie­s Israel and Iran.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said the deaths at the Hama air base included Syrian government troops and allied militiamen, adding it was not clear what triggered the explosions. Syrian state TV also reported the blasts, which sent off a large plume of smoke into the sky, but did not give a reason or mention casualties. A rebel commander in the area said the armed opposition did not target the air base and is not responsibl­e for the explosion. There were also no reports of jets in the skies at the time of the explosions. On Friday, the Britain-based Observator­y reported at least five successive explosions and said it was not clear whether they were a result of attacks that targeted the air base or a result of a technical error or overheatin­g. The Hama air base is used by government warplanes that carry out airstrikes on central and northern Syria. The incident comes amid heightened tensions between Israel and Iran, which has troops and thousands of allied Shiite militias supporting Syrian President Bashar Assad in Syria’s civil war. Also Friday, a Kremlin official reiterated President Vladimir Putin’s statement a day earlier from his meeting with Syrian President Bashar Assad about the need for the foreign troops to pull out from Syria, referring to Iran and Hezbollah. Alexander Lavrentyev, Putin’s envoy for Syria, said Friday that Putin’s statement was also aimed at the U.S. and Turkey.

Israel views the Iranian expansion along its doorstep as a threat, and has launched blistering bombardmen­t of Iranian positions in Syria recently, killing Iranian fighters after an alleged Iranian rocket barrage toward its positions on the annexed Golan Heights. In late April, a missile attack on government outposts in Hama and Aleppo provinces in northern Syria killed more than a dozen pro-government fighters, many of them Iranians. Meanwhile, France’s government said Friday it is imposing new sanctions on people and companies suspected of helping Syria’s chemical weapons program. The Finance Ministry and Foreign Ministry announced a freeze on assets of three individual­s and nine companies involved in research or purchasing for the Syrian Scientific Research Center. The Syrian lab is accused of producing chemical weapons for President Bashar Assad’s government. France says companies from multiple countries have been furnishing materials for the manufactur­e of chemical weapons, including sarin gas. France hosted leading diplomats Friday from 32 countries for a meeting of a new body aimed at better identifyin­g and punishing those who use chemical weapons. French Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said “we will first firstly act on finding a new mechanism so that the internatio­nal community is able to establish who is responsibl­e for a chemical attack.”

 ?? AP PhoTo/hASSAn AMMAr, FIle ?? In this Saturday, April 14 file photo, a Syrian soldier films the damage of the Syrian Scientific Research Center which was attacked by U.S., British and French military strikes to punish President Bashar Assad for suspected chemical attack against...
AP PhoTo/hASSAn AMMAr, FIle In this Saturday, April 14 file photo, a Syrian soldier films the damage of the Syrian Scientific Research Center which was attacked by U.S., British and French military strikes to punish President Bashar Assad for suspected chemical attack against...

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