Albuquerque Journal

Car bomb kills dozens in Syria

Town near Turkish border, held by rebels, targeted in attack

- BY SARAH EL DEEB

BEIRUT — A car bomb ripped through a busy commercial district in a rebelheld Syrian town along the Turkish border Saturday, killing nearly 50 in a huge explosion that damaged buildings and left rescuers scrambling to find survivors amid the wreckage, opposition activists said.

Rescuers and doctors said the explosion was so large there were nearly 100 wounded and burned. Over 50 wounded were transporte­d to the Turkish border town of Kilis for treatment, as local hospitals couldn’t cope.

There was no immediate claim of responsibi­lity. Locals said a rigged tanker caused the explosion and blamed Islamic State militants, who have carried out attacks in the town before. The militant group has been increasing­ly pressed in Syria and Iraq, and has escalated its attacks against Turkey — which backs Syrian opposition fighters in a campaign against the group in northern Syria.

Azaz, only a couple of miles from the Turkish border, is a key town on a route used by opposition fighters moving between Syria and Turkey, and is a hub for anti-government activists as well as many displaced from the recent fighting in Aleppo city. Activists say its pre-war population of 30,000 has swelled.

It is also sandwiched between rival groups, including Kurdish fighters to the west and Turkeyback­ed opposition groups to the east. Islamic State militants, who have tried to advance on the key border town before have been pushed back farther east in recent months in the Turkey-backed offensive.

The bomb went off early Saturday afternoon outside a local courthouse and security headquarte­rs operated by the opposition fighters who control the town, resident and activist Saif Alnajdi told The Associated Press from Azaz.

“It hit the busiest part of the town,” Alnajdi said, referring to the administra­tive part of town.

A medical worker speaking to a local media outfit, al-Jisr, said many charred bodies, and body parts mixed with bones and mud, were piled up in local hospitals.

Rami Abdurrahma­n, the head of the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights monitoring group, said at least 48 people were killed, including 14 fighters and guards to the local courthouse. He said the explosion was caused by a rigged water or fuel tanker, which explained the large blast and high death toll. The activist-operated local Azaz Media center and Shabha Press put the death toll at 60, adding that search and rescue operations continued for hours after the explosion.

Alnajdi said rescue workers were still working to identify and remove the bodies from the area, suggesting that the death toll was not final. He said some of the severely wounded were transporte­d across the border into the Turkish town of Kilis for treatment. The Turkish state-run Anadolu news agency said 53 wounded Syrians were brought to Kilis’ local hospital for treatment, including five in critical condition, who were transferre­d to Gaziantep. The agency said one later died.

Media activist Baha alHalabi, based in Aleppo province and who gathered informatio­n from Azaz residents, said witnesses reported many unidentifi­ed bodies. Footage shared online showed a large plume of black smoke rising above the chaotic street with the sound of gunfire in the background as onlookers gathered around the site. In one instance, a father ran away from the scene, carrying his child to safety.

The courthouse and the security headquarte­rs were damaged, as well as the Red Crescent and municipali­ty offices, according to activists in the area.

A nationwide weeklong cease-fire has mostly held across most of Syria after Russia and Turkey, who support opposite sides of the conflict, reached an agreement in late December. It is set to pave the way for peace talks between Assad’s government and the opposition in Kazakhstan later this month. The Islamic State group and al-Qaida-linked group Fatah al-Sham Front are not included in the deal, according to the Syrian government.

 ?? SAIF ALNAJDI/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Rescue workers attend to the wreckage after almost 50 were killed when a car bomb went off in a busy market in the rebel-held Syrian town of Azaz on Saturday.
SAIF ALNAJDI/ASSOCIATED PRESS Rescue workers attend to the wreckage after almost 50 were killed when a car bomb went off in a busy market in the rebel-held Syrian town of Azaz on Saturday.

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