Muscat Daily

Attacks kill 27 in Damascus and Syrian rebel stronghold

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Damascus, Syria - A rare bombing of an army bus in Damascus and shelling moments later of a town in rebel-held northweste­rn Syria killed at least 27 people on Wednesday in the deadliest flareup in months.

Two bombs planted on an army bus in central Damascus were detonated early in the morning, killing 14 people in the worst such attack in the capital in four years, the state news agency SANA reported.

There was no immediate claim for the bombing but moments later shelling by government forces killed 13 people in Idlib province, an area controlled by groups that have claimed such attacks in the past.

‘A terrorist bombing using two explosive devices targeted a passing bus’ at a key bridge in the capital, the news agency said, reporting that at least three people had also been wounded.

Images released by SANA showed first responders searching the charred carcass of the bus and what the news agency said was a bomb squad defusing a third device planted in the same area.

A military source quoted by the news agency said the bombs were detonated as the bus passed near the Hafez al-Assad bridge, close to the national museum in the heart of the capital.

“We hadn’t seen violence of that type in a long time,” a fruit vendor who gave his name as Salman told AFP at the scene.

“We thought we were done with such attacks. I hope this will be the last bombing,” he said.

Damascus had been largely spared such violence in recent years, especially since troops and allied fighters retook the last significan­t rebel bastion near the capital in 2018.

The attack is the deadliest in the capital since a bombing claimed by the Islamic State group targeted the Justice Palace in March 2017, killing at least 30 people.

Around an hour after the Damascus attack, shelling by the Syrian army struck the rebel-held town of Ariha, in the northweste­rn region of Idlib.

Idlib carnage

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said the rockets struck a busy area at the time children were heading to school.

Three children were among 13 people killed, the Britain-based war monitor said.

It was the highest civilian toll since a March 2020 truce deal brokered by Turkey and Russia effectivel­y put fighting in Idlib on standby, according to the Observator­y.

“At 8am (0500 GMT) we woke up to the bombardmen­t. The children were terrified and were screaming,” said Bilal Trissi, a father of two who lives nearby.

“We didn’t know what to do or where to go and we didn’t see anything because of all the dust around us,” he said.

“They bombed us in our neighbourh­ood and in the market. There are children who died and people who lost their limbs... We don’t know why, what are we guilty of?”

The Damascus bombing will challenge the government’s assertion that the decade-old war is over and stability guaranteed for reconstruc­tion efforts and investment projects to begin in earnest.

The government of President Bashar Assad has been striving to claw itself out of internatio­nal isolation and had been making inroads in recent months.

In another incident on Wednesday, six members of a pro-government fighters were killed in an arms depot blast in the central Syrian province of Hama, the Observator­y said.

Seven other members of the National Defence Forces were wounded in the explosion, the cause of which remains unclear, the monitor added.

 ?? (AFP) ?? A charred Syrian army bus (top) that was targeted with explosive devices in the Syrian capital Damascus on Wednesday; Children (right) walk past debris at the site of shelling in the Syrian town of Ariha in the rebel-held northweste­rn Syrian Idlib province on Wednesday
(AFP) A charred Syrian army bus (top) that was targeted with explosive devices in the Syrian capital Damascus on Wednesday; Children (right) walk past debris at the site of shelling in the Syrian town of Ariha in the rebel-held northweste­rn Syrian Idlib province on Wednesday
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