Twin
suicide bombers targeted a Damascus police station today killing at
least 14 people, as the Syrian army launched multiple attacks on rebel
positions in the northern province of Aleppo.
The blasts wounded more than 30 people, state media and the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights watchdog said.
They
caused widespread damage in the capital's central Marjeh neighbourhood,
with state television broadcasting images of blood and broken glass on
the pavement near the scene.
"The number of casualties
after a twin suicide attack in Marjeh square has risen to 14 dead and 31
injured," said the channel, updating an earlier toll.
"The
two suicide explosions took place near a police station," it said. The
Observatory put the death toll at 15, and said one of the blasts "was
caused by a suicide bomb attacker who blew himself up inside the police
station."
"A second explosion took place just outside the
police station," the Britain-based group said, without elaborating on
the nature of that blast.
"The number of casualties is
expected to rise because several of the wounded are in critical
condition," added the Observatory, which relies on a network of
activists, doctors and lawyers for its reports.
The Syrian
cabinet denounced the attack, saying "armed terrorist groups and those
behind them have failed completely because of the victories achieved by
our brave army," state news agency SANA reported.
Meanwhile,
in Aleppo province, the army launched multiple attacks on rebel
positions, including insurgent-held areas of the key Minnigh military
airbase, the Observatory said.
"Parts of Minnigh military
airbase were shelled by regime forces... Rebels are in control of large
swathes of the airbase," the Observatory said.
A military
source told AFP heavy clashes were raging at the base for a third day,
but denied any part of the airport was under rebel control.
He
said the fighting was not part of a broader campaign that the regime
has pledged to launch to re-take Aleppo city, large parts of which are
in rebel hands, and other parts of the province.
But other
areas of Aleppo were under fire, two days after pro-regime media said
an army campaign in the province would began within "hours or days."
Regime
forces shelled the opposition-controlled villages of Deir Hafer and
Al-Bab, and hit the insurgent stronghold of Marea with rockets, the
Observatory said.
There were unconfirmed reports of a ground-to-ground missile strike in Aleppo province, the Observatory added.
The
regime has pledged to focus its attention on Aleppo after winning a
strategic victory by retaking the town of Qusayr, in the central
province of Homs.
Backed by fighters from Lebanon's
powerful Hezbollah militia -- a key Syrian regime ally -- the army
seized the town near the Lebanese border last week.
The militia's role has raised fears about the growing regionalisation of the conflict in Syria, which began in March 2011.
The
fighting has spilled over into Lebanon, where seven rockets fired from
Syria landed in the Hermel region, a Hezbollah bastion, on Tuesday.
The
deteriorating situation in the Golan Heights has prompted Austria to
announce it would withdraw its troops from the UN monitoring force on
the strategic Syrian plateau, which is partly occupied by Israel.
maryjane
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