At
least 13 killed, dozens injured in Damascus car bombing amid UN peace
envoy visit
At
least 13 people have been killed and 29 injured as a powerful blast
hit outside a police station in Bab Touma neighborhood in the old
part of Damascus, reports the state news agency. It comes as Lakhdar
Brahimi visits the Syrian capital for talks.
RT,
21
October, 2012
Smoke
rose above what were believed to be twin car bomb explosions in front
of a police station, witnesses said. Other reports suggest it was a
taxi rigged with explosives.
Ambulances
were seen rushing to the scene as police shut access to the area,
Twitter user NMSyria says.
At
least 13 people were killed by the blast, SANA reported citing
sources in the Interior Ministry. But given that the area is usually
crowded, there are fears the death toll could be much higher. It is
also unclear whether any police staff are among those dead or
injured.
Dozens
of cars were burnt and many houses sustained extensive damage.
The
area was busy at the time of the explosion, with people returning
from Sunday prayers. Bab Touma is a predominantly Christian
neighborhood. It is also a popular shopping place in Damascus.
Two
more bombings were reported to have occurred in Syria on Sunday. An
explosive device, planted “by
terrorists”,
detonated on a road in the capital’s neighborhood, injuring several
passers-by. A suicide bomber blew up his car outside a Syrian-French
Hospital in the besieged city of Aleppo. The latter instance resulted
in material damage only, SANA said.
Syrians dousing a car following a bomb explosion outside a police station in a Christian quarter of Damascus' Old City on October 21, 2012. (AFP Photo / SANA)
Meanwhile,
the UN-Arab League peace envoy Lakhdar Brahimi arrived in Damascus on
Sunday for talks. The envoy met with President Bashar al-Assad in a
bid to implement a ceasefire by next week, when the Muslim festival
of Eid al-Adha begins.
“I
appeal to everyone to take a unilateral decision to cease hostilities
on the occasion of Eid al-Adha and that this truce be respected from
today or tomorrow,”
Brahimi told reporters in Damascus after meeting with Assad on
Sunday.
Brahimi
had previously met with Syrian
opposition groups inside
and outside the country. He said that while he "found
an overwhelming response"
from Assad's opponents to his cease-fire plan, he only received
"promises"
without "commitment".
The
peace envoy did not reveal Assad's response to his plan. But SANA
news agency says Assad assured Brahimi that he supported his mission:
"The
president said he is open to any sincere effort to find a political
solution to the crisis on the basis of respecting the Syrian
sovereignty and rejecting foreign interference."
Assad
also stressed that a political solution must be "based
on the principle of halting terrorism, a commitment from the
countries involved in supporting, arming and harboring terrorists in
Syria to stop doing such acts,"
the state news agency reported.
Whether
Assad has in fact committed to the peace plan remains unclear,
however.
Officials
in Damascus blame the popular uprising that began in March of last
year on a foreign conspiracy. They say the revolt against the
government is an insurgency headed by "terrorists"
who infiltrated the country from across the border.
The
UN estimates the conflict in Syria has left over 20,000 people dead,
while various opposition groups claim the death toll now stands at
33,000. Over 340,000 refugees have fled the country.

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