Houston Chronicle

Scores die in Syria as ISIS bombs cities on coast that house displaced citizens

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BEIRUT — A series of coordinate­d blasts hit bus stations, an electricit­y plant and a hospital across two Syrian cities Monday, killing at least 80 people in the first major security breach of President Bashar Assad’s coastal stronghold­s in the country’s fiveyear war.

The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for the attack on social media. The militants are not known to maintain a presence in the surroundin­g countrysid­e, an area in which mainstream rebels and al-Qaida affiliated insurgents form the predominan­t opposition to Assad’s forces.

The seven closely coordinate­d morning blasts in the pro-government cities of Tartus and Jableh targeted civilians in large numbers, and seemed intended to send a message that no part of Syria is safe from violence.

They also underlined the worrying inability of world powers to jumpstart Syrian peace talks in Geneva as the violence worsens.

A coalition of nearly 30 rebel factions said Sunday they would give the government 48 hours to end its offensives around besieged opposition-held suburbs of Damascus or they would consider the partial ceasefire brokered in late February “dissolved.” Yet fighting had already resumed in earnest around the country by late April.

The peacefulne­ss of the two coastal cities meant they housed hundreds of thousands of internally displaced people who fled violence from other parts of the country.

Syria’s state news agency, SANA, reported that four explosions struck Jableh, the result of three suicide attacks and a car bomb.

The targets included the emergency entrance of the Jableh National Hospital, it said.

Shortly afterward, suicide bombers followed by an explosives-laded car tore through a packed bus station and a petrol station in Tartus, minutes apart, TV reports and residents said. More than 38 people were killed and many injured in those blasts, Syrian state media reported.

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, an opposition monitoring group based in Britain, put the death toll much higher than Syrian government sources, saying that more than 145 had been killed.

 ?? AFP / Getty Images ?? Flames rage at the scene of multiple bombings Monday in Tartus, Syria. The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for coordinate­d blasts in Jableh and Tartus. Targets included bus stations and a hospital.
AFP / Getty Images Flames rage at the scene of multiple bombings Monday in Tartus, Syria. The Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for coordinate­d blasts in Jableh and Tartus. Targets included bus stations and a hospital.

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