Rebel bombs target gov’t security building in Damascus

BEIRUT - Bombs planted by rebels exploded at a school building occupied by pro-government militias in Damascus on Tuesday and world leaders weighed Syria’s deepening crisis at a UN General Assembly meeting, but without proposals to resolve it.

By (Reuters)

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Published: Tue 25 Sep 2012, 10:54 PM

Last updated: Fri 3 Apr 2015, 3:22 PM

Vastly outgunned, rebels fighting to topple President Bashar al-Assad have increasingly relied on home-made bombs to target their opponents, striving to level the playing field against state forces using fighter jets, artillery and tanks.

“At exactly 9:35 a.m., seven improvised devices were set off in two explosions to target a school used for weekly planning meetings between shabbiha militia and security officers,” said Abu Moaz, a leader of Ansar al-Islam, one of the rebel groups in the 18-month-old revolt against President Bashar al-Assad.

Rebels said they hoped their attack would kill top-level security officials - as they did with a major Damascus bombing in July - but gave no casualty count. State media said at least seven people were wounded, with minor damage to buildings.

Activists say that more than 27,000 people have been killed in the Syrian uprising, but the geo-strategic rivalries of world and regional powers have wrought deadlock over how to solve the conflict. The West and Gulf Arab states have sided with the opposition, while Iran, Russia and China have backed Assad.

Qatar has called on world powers to prepare a “Plan B” for Syria within weeks and set up a no-fly zone to provide a safe haven inside the country in case international mediator Lakhdar Brahimi fails to make headway. Prime Minister Sheikh Hamad bin Jassim al-Thani said he believed that Arab and European countries would be ready to take part, despite their public reluctance to commit the forces needed for such a mission.

Speaking at the United Nations General Assembly, US President Barack Obama accused Iran of helping to keep a dictatorship in power in Syria.

“Just as it restricts the rights of its own people, the Iranian government props up a dictator in Damascus and supports terrorist groups abroad,” Obama said in a reference to Assad.

“We again declare that the regime of Bashar al-Assad must come to an end so that the suffering of the Syrian people can stop, and a new dawn can begin.”

“Bad and getting worse”

Syria’s conflict, once a peaceful protest movement, has evolved into a civil war that the UN Special Envoy to Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, said was “extremely bad and getting worse.” He said that the stalemate in the country could soon “find an opening”, without elaborating.

Even the capital Damascus has become a battleground between Assad’s forces and opposition fighters.

Last week, the army bombarded rebel strongholds there to flush them out of the capital, once seen as Assad’s untouchable seat of power but now a scene of daily fighting.

In Tuesday’s Damascus bombing, the state news channel Syria TV quoted a government official as saying two improvised explosives planted by “terrorists” blew up near the “Sons of Martyrs” school.

Residents said smoke was billowing from the area in southeastern Damascus and ambulances were rushing to the scene. Some said they believed two people had died in the attack but could not name the victims.

Damascus residents also reported heavy clashes for two hours on Baghdad Street in a central district of the capital, just to the north of the ancient Old City.

Abused children

The British-based charity Save the Children released a harrowing report about abuse of Syrian refugee children.

Khalid, 15, said he was hung by his arms from the ceiling of his own school building and beaten senseless. Wael said he saw a 6-year-old starved and beaten to death, “tortured more than anyone else in the room.”

“He was beaten regularly. I watched him die,” Wael was quoted as saying. “He only survived for three days and then he simply died.”

UN investigators say Syrian government forces have committed human rights violations “on an alarming scale”, but have also listed multiple killings and kidnappings by armed rebels trying to oust Assad after 12 years in power.

The children that Save the Children spoke to in refugee camps in neighbouring countries said they had witnessed massacres and seen family members killed during the conflict.

Humanitarian conditions are worsening as the violence drags on. The president of the Syrian Arab Red Crescent, which has been the only relief group on the ground the entire 18 months of conflict, said it was in dire need of supplies.

“We need to concentrate mostly on health and shelter because there are 1.5 million displaced people,” Abdul Rahman Attar told Reuters during a visit to Oslo. “We need more of everything.”

“We need help with shelter, medical equipment in medicine,” he said. “There’s still killing and that’s most critical, we must stop the killings first.”


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