Twin bombings Friday ripped through two security
facilities in the Syrian city of Aleppo, killing 25 people and
wounding 175, according to Syrian Health Ministry.
The attack, which state media blamed on "terrorist gangs," were
the first in Aleppo that has so far showed support for the regime of
President Bashar al-Assad despite some anti-government protests since
the uprising started in mid-March.
Syrian state television said two suicide bombers had carried out
the attack.
The Syrian opposition accused the regime of masterminding the
bombings allegedly to tarnish the rebels' image.
The head of the dissident Syrian Free Army, Colonel Riad al-Assad,
denied his comrades were involved in the attack.
"The Syrian Free Army does not carry out such attacks. It is the
regime which perpetrates such criminal acts," he told the Dubai-based
broadcaster Al Arabiya.
Friday's attack was the third of its kind in Syria in three
months. Two bombings in December and January killed more than 70
people, according to government figures.
State television showed footage of human flesh among the rubble of
buildings hit in Friday's blasts.
The broadcaster said the bombings had occurred near a park and
many children were killed in the attack.
The explosions were reported as the government forces pressed
ahead with an onslaught on restive areas in the central province of
Homs, activists in the area told dpa.
The forces bombarded on Friday the districts of Baba Amr,
al-Khalidiyeh and al-Bayada, killing at least 30 people, added the
activists.
"Dozens of the regime soldiers are now in the district of Inshaat
conducting house-to-house searches and intimidating the people
staying in their houses despite heavy shelling of the area on
Thursday," Omar Homsi, a Syrian activist told dpa from the area of
Kussair in Homs.
Inshaat is a hub of anti-government protests in Homs, say
activists.
Some 755 people have been killed in the government assault on Homs
over the last six days, according to the opposition Local
Coordination committees.
Naji Tayyara, the head of the foreign affairs department at the
Opposition National Syrian Council, said the deaths included 70
children.
He appealed to humanitarian groups to offer immediate medical help
to the province.
Meanwhile, the Lebanese army deployed en mass on Friday near its
northern border with Syria over reports that arms were being smuggled
to rebels into Homs, a Lebanese Army source told dpa.
A resident in the Lebanese border area of Wadi Khaled said some
wounded Syrians from Homs had illegally entered the area for medical
treatment.
"Seven injured people managed to enter. One died while the others
are being treated in hospitals of the area," he said, speaking on
condition of anonymity.
Since the uprising erupted in Syria last March, an estimated 5,000
Syrians have taken refuge in northern Lebanon.
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News Column
25 Killed In Twin Bombings In Syrian City of Aleppo
Feb 10, 2012
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Source: Copyright 2012 dpa Deutsche Presse-Agentur GmbH
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