Blasts rock Damascus during French President Macron’s visit

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Emergency personnel working at the site of an explosion, near a hotel where French President Emmanuel Macron was meant to be staying, in Damascus, Syria, on July 7.

Emergency personnel working at the site of an explosion near a hotel where French President Emmanuel Macron was meant to be staying in Damascus on July 7.

PHOTO: REUTERS

  • Two bombs exploded near the hotel where French President Macron was meeting in Damascus, injuring 18 people but not disrupting his schedule or meetings with Syrian officials.
  • Macron is the first EU head of state to visit Syria since rebels led by President Ahmed al-Sharaa overthrew Bashar al-Assad in 2024, highlighting Syria's political transformation.
  • The blasts reflect ongoing security challenges amid continued violence from militant groups like ISIS and tensions among Syria's religious and ethnic communities.

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DAMASCUS – Two bombs exploded near the hotel in Damascus where Emmanuel Macron held meetings on July 7, Syrian state media said, but the French President’s office said he did not hear the explosions and he met Syrian President Ahmed al-Sharaa soon afterwards.

The blasts underscore the major security challenges in Syria, where Macron is the first head of state of a European Union country to visit since rebels led by Sharaa toppled former Syrian president Bashar al-Assad in 2024.

The explosions struck a busy area between the Syrian tourism ministry and the national museum across the street from the Four Seasons, where Macron was meeting civil society groups.

Syria’s state news agency reported that 18 people were injured in the explosions, including four police officers.

The first blast hit soon after Macron’s motorcade left for the presidential palace.

Reuters footage showed flames and smoke billowing from a trash can when a second explosion was caught on camera a few metres away.

The second blast went off next to an ambulance parked at the scene, where some two dozen people had gathered.

Flames and thick black smoke were seen billowing from close to the shops behind, as emergency personnel worked to put out the blaze.

Reuters video showed Macron’s motorcade heading along a highway towards the presidential palace before the blasts.

Photographs then showed him standing alongside Sharaa and meeting other Syrian officials and military officers.

Internal security forces have launched search operations to identify those responsible, Syria’s state-run Al-Ekhbariya TV cited a security source as saying.

Roads were sealed off and security measures were implemented after the blasts, a security source told Reuters.

epa13093846 French President Emmanuel Macron is greeted by Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa at the Presidential Palace in Damascus, Syria, 07 July 2027. The French president is the first head of state from a European Union country to visit Syria since the fall of the Assad regime.  EPA/MOHAMED AL RIFAI

French President Emmanuel Macron being greeted by Syrian President Ahmad al-Sharaa at the Presidential Palace in Damascus on July 7.

PHOTO: EPA

The French Presidency said the blasts were not audible from the presidential motorcade and a Reuters journalist with the press group accompanying Macron did not hear the blast or see any commotion during the French President’s morning events. The presidency said he intended to stick to his planned schedule for the day.

Syrian political transformation

Macron’s visit was intended to highlight Syria’s political transformation under Sharaa, who has established close ties with Western and Middle Eastern powers that shunned Assad, as he seeks to rebuild a country shattered by 13 years of war.

During the Syrian conflict, a range of militant groups, including ISIS, gained a foothold in the country.

Last week, a bomb at a Damascus cafe killed nine people and wounded 20 others. There was no claim of responsibility.

ISIS has claimed to be behind a series of attacks on government forces in Syria since February, when the jihadist group announced what it described as a new phase of operations against Sharaa’s government.

Sharaa, a member of Syria’s Sunni Muslim majority, has pledged to build an inclusive new order in Syria since ending more than five decades of iron-fisted rule by the Assad family.

But his promise has been tested by bouts of violence pitting pro-government forces against members of religious and ethnic minority groups, with many hundreds killed in 2025. REUTERS

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