The Post

Nervous Assad denies assassinat­ion attempt

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SYRIA

SYRIA was forced to deny that President Bashar al-Assad was the target of an attempted assassinat­ion in a rebel rocket attack yesterday, as state television broadcast pictures of a nervous-looking president attending prayers.

Two armed groups claimed they had hit Assad’s presidenti­al vehicles with artillery as he travelled through the Malki area of Da- mascus for prayers at the start of Muslim holiday Eid al-Fitr.

To deny the claim, Syrian state television broadcast images of the president in the Anas Bin Malek mosque, praying alongside senior Ba’ath party officials and the Grand Mufti of Syria. In the brief video recording, the Syrian leader was seen to move quickly and, while smiling and shaking hands, his eyes darted nervously as he began praying. It was not possible to confirm independen­tly when the footage was taken, whether before or after the alleged attack.

Omran Zoabi, the Syrian informatio­n minister, denied an attack had taken place, deriding the claims as ‘‘dreams and illusions’’.

‘‘The president arrived at the mosque driving his own car, he attended the prayer and greeted everyone in the mosque as he does every day when he meets people,’’ Zoabi said.

Ahmed Hassoun, the Grand Mufti of Syria, who was pictured sitting beside the president in the mosque, said: ‘‘This is totally untrue, a couple of shells fell in the neighbourh­ood as they have done in every part of Damascus in recent months. There was no assassinat­ion attempt.

‘‘I was next to the president, we prayed together. After, he spoke to people outside the mosque and drove away in his car.’’

Two Islamist groups, Liwa alIslam and Liwa Tahrir al-Sham, later separately claimed responsibi­lity for the attack.

Islam Alloush, a spokesman for the Liwa al-Islam brigade, said: ‘‘We fired Grad rockets at 7.20am, intending to hit Bashar al-Assad. We had been planning the operation for one week.’’

Alloush said that ‘‘informers’’ for the group in the area had told him that one of the rockets hit the motorcade, injuring or killing some of Assad’s bodyguards.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights watchdog reported three mortar shells hit the Malki district in the early morning, but said it was sceptical of rumours that the motorcade had been hit. Residents in the district confirmed that the area had been shelled.

In another move to pressure the Syrian regime, the leader of the exiled Syrian National Co- alition, the main political opposition group, appeared in the southern Syrian city of Deraa yesterday. Footage showed Ahmed alJarba praying in a mosque in the city, which is close to the Jordanian border and held the first protests against the regime.

At least 4420 people, more than half of those civilians, were killed in Syria during the holy month of Ramadan, the Syrian Observator­y said.

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