Rebel bomb attacks drag Syria into guerrilla war (INDEPENDENT UK) LOVEDAY MORRIS BEIRUT, Lebanon 04/28/12)
Source: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/rebel-bomb-attacks-drag-syria-into-guerrilla-war-7685170.html
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Several large bomb blasts rocked the Syrian capital Damascus
yesterday, killing at least nine people and stoking fears of an
increasingly bloody insurgency as rebels are forced to adopt
guerrilla tactics while the international community stands idly by.
Activists reported at least four blasts in the city, the deadliest of
them outside the Zeen al-Abadeen mosque in the Midan district.
They came on a day of violence across the country, with activists
accusing the government of using shelling and gunfire to prevent
peaceful protests.
Syrian state television Sana showed the carnage of the Midan
explosion, with dismembered body parts and limbs strewn across the
street.
It said at least nine were killed and scores injured in the atrocity,
which it blamed on a "terrorist suicide bomber".
One resident said a man had approached soldiers and set off a bomb
belt when challenged. However, some activists claimed the attack was
staged by the government.
There has been little let-up in violence since a UN-brokered
ceasefire a fortnight ago. UN observers and the international
community are scrambling for an alternative course of action if the
six-point plan put forwarded by UN-Arab League envoy Kofi Annan fails.
Hundreds of thousands of Syrians took to the streets across the
country, their protests increasingly rounding on the international
community and UN observers.
Many demonstrations were broken up with bullets and tear gas,
according to activists, who reported heavy shelling in Homs before
Friday prayers.
"UN monitors, Allah is monitoring you," some 1,000 protesters in
Zabadani, a Damascus suburb, chanted.
Referring to the Moroccan general heading the advance team of
monitors, one protester held up a sign reading: "General Ahmed
Himmiche is just another one of Assad´s security guards." Just 15 of
the advance team of 30 are currently in the country. The UN yesterday
said the remaining half would arrive by Monday as it deflects
criticism for the slow deployment.
Other blasts in Damascus yesterday a included one in Adawi, near the
agricultural department of Damascus University. There were also
reported car bomb attacks near a government facility hosting
militiamen in the city´s industrial area and in the city centre.
Mar Ram, a Damascus activist, said he heard the city centre blast,
which was near the Zayed bin Thabet mosque.
"It was huge," he said. "All citizens of Damascus must have heard it.
"We started hearing ambulances. You could feel the tension in the
air. They are saying it´s a car bomb, we say it´s the regime."
With international journalists largely barred from entering Syria,
such reports are difficult to verify.
However, Free Syrian Army commanders confirmed to The Independent
that with inferior firepower to the army, they are increasingly
turning to homemade bombs.
The British Conservative Middle East Council, which made a fact-
finding trip to Lebanon this month to meet refugees and the FSA, said
the risk of an Iraq-style sectarian conflict – a narrative long
exploited by the regime – had " become a self-fulfilling prophecy".
It said that as rebels turn to homemade explosives, it will provide
an opportunity that Jihadist groups who specialise in them "will
likely exploit". (©independent.co.uk 04/28/12)
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