Double explosion in Beirut, the deadliest attack since the Lebanon civil war (Image: Reuters) |
Reuters -BEIRUT: At least 43 people were killed and more than 240 wounded on Thursday in
two suicide bomb blasts claimed by Islamic State in a crowded residential
district in Beirut's southern suburbs, a stronghold of the Shi'ite Muslim group
Hezbollah.
The explosions
were the first attacks in more than a year to target a Hezbollah stronghold
inside Lebanon, and came at time when the group is stepping up its involvement
in the Syrian civil war -- a fight which has brought Sunni Islamist threats and
invective against the Iran-backed Shi'ite group.
Hezbollah has
sent hundreds of fighters to support Syrian President Bashar al-Assad's forces
in the four-year-old conflict over the border. Government forces backed by
Hezbollah and Iranian troops have intensified their fight against mostly Sunni
insurgents, including Islamic State, since Russia launched an air campaign in
support of Assad on Sept. 30.
Syria's civil
war is increasingly playing out as a proxy battle between regional rivals,
including Iran and Saudi Arabia, which supports the rebels. The two foes also
back opposing political forces in Lebanon, which suffered its own civil war
from 1975 to 1990, and where a political crisis has been brought about by
factional and sectarian rivalries.
The blasts occurred
almost simultaneously late on Thursday and struck a Shi'ite community center
and a nearby bakery in the commercial and residential area of Borj al-Barajneh,
security sources said. A closely guarded Hezbollah-run hospital is also nearby.
Health Minister
Wael Abu Faour said 43 people were killed and 240 people were wounded.
Islamic State
said in a statement posted online by its supporters that its members blew up a
bike loaded with explosives in Borj al-Barajneh and that when onlookers
gathered, a suicide bomber blew himself up among them. The group said the
attacks killed 40 people.
Hezbollah vowed
to continue its fight against "terrorists", warning of a "long
war" against its enemies.
Medics rushed to
treat the wounded after the explosions, which damaged shop fronts and left the
street stained with blood and littered with broken glass.
Interior
Minister Nouhad Machnouk said a third suicide bomber had been killed by one of
the explosions before he could detonated his own bomb. His body was found nearby.
It was a blow to
Hezbollah's tight security measures in the area, which were strengthened
following bombings last year. The army had also set up checkpoints around the
southern suburb entrances.
'UNJUSTIFIABLE
ATTACKS'
A series of bomb
blasts struck Lebanon in 2013 and 2014, including attacks on Hezbollah
strongholds. Most of them were claimed by Sunni militants in response to
Hezbollah sending fighters to Syria to fight in support of Assad.
Hezbollah's
involvement has brought many threats against it in Lebanon.
Security forces
say they have foiled a number of attacks inside the country recently and
dismantled terror cells. A security source said a man wearing a suicide vest
was arrested in Tripoli on Thursday, and a bomb dismantled in the northern city.
The attacks drew
a wave of condemnation across the country's political spectrum, including some
of Hezbollah's opponents.
Lebanonese Prime
Minister Tammam Salam condemned the attacks as "unjustifiable", and
called for unity against "plans to create strife" in the country,
urging officials to overcome their differences. France's foreign ministry also
condemned the attacks.
The war in
Syria, with which Lebanon shares a border of more than 300 km (190 miles), has
ignited sectarian strife in the multi-confessional country, leading to bombings
and fighting between supporters of the opposing sides in Syria.
Gun battles
broke out in Tripoli last year in clashes that involved the army and Islamist
militants, and regular infiltrations of Islamists from Syria into a Lebanese
border town still draw army or Hezbollah fire.
The bombers also
struck as Lebanese lawmakers held a legislative session for the first time in
over a year. A political crisis has left the country without a president for 17
months, with the government failing to take even basic decisions.
Religious
leaders warned last year that in the absence of a head of state, sectarian
strife was threatening a country that was gripped for 15 years by its own civil
war.
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