Monday, 29 April 2013

Syria crisis: PM Halqi survives Damascus car bombing



The BBC's Wyre Davis reports from Beirut: "It shows really the ability of the armed opposition groups to strike at the heart of the regime"
Syrian Prime Minister Wael al-Halqi has survived a car bomb attack in the capital, Damascus, state media say.
The blast in the capital's western Mazzeh district targeted Mr Halqi's convoy, state TV said, causing a number of casualties.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based activist group, said one of Mr Halqi's bodyguards was among several others killed.
It is unclear whether the blast was a suicide bombing or a planted device.
State television carried a brief interview with Mr Halqi, saying that it was filmed after the attack.
Syrian Prime Minister Wael al-HalqiMr Halqi survived but his bodyguard was reported killed
He appears assured but somewhat shaken in the interview, in which he talks about a meeting he has just attended on the economy.
State TV said the blast happened at a busy intersection, near a public garden and a school. The upmarket neighbourhood is home to government buildings, the residences of several political figures and a military airport vital to the regime's defences.
"I was walking in the street when suddenly there was a very powerful explosion and I saw a car burning and people running," a witness told AFP.
An unnamed Syrian official said the explosion was caused by a bomb placed underneath a parked car in the area, the Associated Press news agency reported.
An earlier report said it had been a suicide attack.

Analysis

Such is the byzantine nature of the Syrian struggle that this bomb attack is bound to be blamed by some opposition circles on the regime itself.
That has certainly been the case in the past, when bombs have gone off inside heavily-secured areas close to the inner sanctum of the regime.
Mezzeh, an upscale area on the west side of Damascus, certainly counts as a government stronghold, with many state offices and residences there as well as an important military airport.
The logic of those accusations is that the regime uses such attacks to portray the rebels as bloodthirsty, indiscriminate terrorists, frightening the public into rallying around the government.
The mainstream rebel Free Syrian Army says in does not carry out bomb attacks in which passing civilians may be the victims. The trademark of hard-liners from the al-Qaeda-related al-Nusra Front is often suicide bombings, which this one does not appear to have been.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights quoted medical sources as saying five civilians in the area were also killed.
The activist group quoted medical sources as saying Mr Halqi's driver and another bodyguard were seriously injured.
Footage from the scene showed the charred remains of several vehicles, and a badly damaged bus. Debris and glass were strewn around a wide area, where onlookers had gathered.
A picture that activists said was of the site just after the attack showed a large plume of black smoke rising into the air near a road and a high-rise building.
Syrian forces and rebels have been fighting around Damascus for months but with neither side gaining the upper hand.
The attack is the latest bombing inside government-controlled areas of the capital.
In December a suicide bombing struck the interior ministry. State media said top officials had escaped unhurt, but it later emerged that the interior minister himself had been badly injured.
So far there has been no claim of responsibility for Monday's attack. Similar bombings in the past have been linked to the jihadist al-Nusra Front, one of the most prominent rebel groups fighting the regime.
Mr Halqi, a senior member of the ruling Baath party, became prime minister last year after Riad Hijab defected to Jordan. He was previously health minister.
More than 70,000 people have been killed since fighting between Syrian forces and rebels erupted in March 2011.

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