Bombs rock Damascus as envoy says change ‘unavoidable’

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  • reni_shin2
    • Aug 2007
    • 9595

    Bombs rock Damascus as envoy says change ‘unavoidable’

    Bombs rock Damascus as envoy says change ‘unavoidable’

    Twin bombs exploded near a tightly guarded government compound in the heart of Damascus on Sunday, state media said, as new international peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi said change was "unavoidable."

    Speaking to satellite news channel Al-Jazeera as he took over as UN-Arab League envoy from former UN chief Kofi Annan, Brahimi carefully refrained, however, from publicly calling as his predecessor had for President Bashar al-Assad to step down.

    Four people were wounded in the twin bombings which struck in the Abu Remmaneh district where several security service buildings and the office of Vice President Faruq al-Shara are located, state television said. The attack, which state media blamed on "terrorists" — the government’s standard term for rebels fighting to end Assad’s rule— came a day after a bombing killed 15 people in a southern suburb of Damascus.

    They were among at least 168 people killed yesterday—110 civilians, 32 soldiers and 26 rebels, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.

    Shara is the highest-ranking Sunni Muslim in Assad’s minority Alawite-led government and was the subject of repeated defection rumours last month before he made a public appearance during a visit by a senior envoy from key ally Iran.

    That was the first time he had appeared in public since he attended a state funeral for top security officials killed in a July 18 bombing that struck at the heart of Assad’s regime.

    Earlier, state media reported that a car bomb explosion near a mosque at Sbeneh in the southern outskirts of the capital yesterday killed 15 people. Sbeneh is a poor neighbourhood where anti-government sentiment is strong. The explosions came after a car bombing hit a funeral for two government supporters in the southeastern suburb of Jaramana on August 28 killing at least 27 people, according to the Syrian Observatory. The violence in the capital came as the army renewed its bombardment of rebel-held areas in the provinces.

    Shelling of Qusayr destroyed the last working bakery in the rebel-held part of the central town, activists said, aggravating a growing food shortage and highlighting the plight of civilians trapped by the fighting.
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