Death toll in Damascus bombing rises to 20: Monitor

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7 killed as three car bombs target Damascus.
Damaged cars are seen at the site of a suicide bombing in Damascus on July 2, 2017.
PHOTO: REUTERS
People inspecting the site of a car bombing in Damascus on July 2, 2017.

PHOTO: REUTERS

BEIRUT (AFP, REUTERS) - The death toll in a suicide bombing in eastern Damascus on Sunday (July 2) rose to 20 people, a monitor said, in the bloodiest attack to hit the Syrian capital in months.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the dead included at least seven pro-regime security personnel and two civilians.

It had not identified the remaining victims.

Security forces had also targeted two other cars that were heading into the city, killing their drivers.

Syrian state news agency Sana quoted a senior police official saying that "terrorists simultaneously blew up three cars", two of them on the road to Damascus airport south-east of the capital and a third in the eastern Sahat Al-Tahrir district.

"The terrorist bombings killed and wounded several civilians and caused physical damage to the area," the official said.

Sahat Al-Tahrir resident Mohammad Tinawi told AFP he had heard "gunfire at around 6am (11am Sunday Singapore time), then an explosion which smashed the glass of houses in the neighbourhood".

He said he had seen Red Crescent volunteers treating two wounded soldiers, as well as two burnt cars and damage to a security checkpoint.

Damascus has been spared the large-scale battles that have devastated other major Syrian cities during the country's six-year civil war.

But dozens of people have been killed in bombings, particularly on the outskirts of the capital.

In mid-March, bomb attacks on a courthouse and restaurant in Damascus killed 32 people. They were claimed by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria group.

That came days after two explosions that left 74 dead in the capital's Old City and were claimed by Tahrir al-Sham, led by the jihadist Fateh al-Sham Front.

Syria's conflict broke out with anti-government protests in 2011, but has since evolved into a multi-front war that has killed more than 320,000 people.

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