Tuesday, November 19, 2013

[batavia-news] 23 killed as blasts rock Iran embassy in Beirut

 

 
 
Tuesday, November 19, 2013
 

23 killed as blasts rock Iran embassy in Beirut

beirutBEIRUT: A double suicide bombing outside the Iranian embassy in Beirut killed at least 23 people yesterday, in an attack claimed by an Al-Qaeda-linked jihadist group. The army said a motorcyclist blew himself up moments before a suicide bomber driving a four-wheel-drive detonated his payload in the southern Beirut stronghold of Hezbollah, an ally of both Iran and the regime of Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad. The mid-morning attack, which the health ministry said also wounded 146 people, was the first time the Iranian mission has been targeted.

The blasts ripped the facades off surrounding buildings, strewing rubble and glass on streets that were stained with blood. Residents walked dazed past charred cars and trees, as soldiers and Hezbollah security men tried to secure the area. The attack follows two other bombings this year in Hezbollah bastions in Beirut, amid rising tensions over the conflict in neighbouring Syria. Iran is one of Syria's closest allies, and is the key sponsor of Hezbollah, a powerful Shiite movement that has dispatched thousands of fighters to bolster the regime in the 32-month uprising.

The blasts were claimed by the Abdullah Azzam Brigades, a jihadist group linked to Al-Qaeda that has previously fired rockets at Israel from Lebanese territory. "This is a double martyrdom operation carried out by two heroes from the heroic Sunnis of Lebanon," Sirajeddin Zreikat, a member of the group, wrote on Twitter. Damascus quickly condemned yesterday's attack. "The Syrian government firmly condemns the terrorist attack carried out near the Iranian embassy in Beirut," state television said. It said an "odour of petrodollars comes from all the terrorist acts against Syria, Lebanon and Iraq," an apparent reference to Saudi Arabia and Qatar, which back Syria's uprising. But Iran, in condemning the attack, accused Israel and its "mercenaries" of responsibility.  Israel immediately denied involvement. Britain and France issued swift statements of condemnation, which London described as a "shocking terrorist attack", and UN chief Ban Ki-moon urged restraint.

The army confirmed the double suicide bombing, saying "the first explosion was caused by a suicide attacker who was driving a motorcycle and blew himself up. The second suicide attacker was driving a 4×4 vehicle and also detonated himself." Iranian Ambassador Ghazanfar Rokn-Abadi said all staff inside the embassy at the time escaped unharmed. But officials in Tehran said the cultural advisor, Ibrahim Al-Ansari, was in critical condition after the blast. By early evening, Mohammad Bashir, director of the Rasul Aazem hospital in the neighbourhood, said Ansari had died of his injuries.

Coincidentally, Lebanon and Iran's football teams were due to play in Beirut yesterday, and the match went ahead, but with fans banned from attending. An AFP correspondent at the scene described blood and glass on the streets, and media broadcast harrowing images of charred bodies, some still on fire. One shocked resident said the attack was an act of "savagery". "People want to live. After this kind of thing we are paralysed for days. Thank God my children were at school," said Farah, a woman in her 30s.

A woman in a black robe and headscarf, unable to stand, clutched a man, pleading with security forces for help. "Nader," she wailed, crying out a man's name. "Nader is missing." Another man ran from the area, carrying a South Asian migrant worker limp in his arms. "People aren't sacred anymore. We aren't safe," said a mechanic whose store windows were shattered by the blasts. He declined to be identified because he did not want to be seen as involved in sectarian tensions that have split the Lebanese over Syria's conflict. "People fight outside (Lebanon), but send their messages through Lebanon. With bombs. It's their SMS service," he added.

At the nearby Rasul Aazem hospital, which received seven bodies from the blasts, relatives waited to hear news of their loved ones while others queued to donate blood. At the Zahraa hospital, Mohamed Al-Hajj was searching for his neighbour Tariq. "He works in front of the embassy and now we don't know where he is. We checked all the hospitals," he told AFP.

Hezbollah has already seen its strongholds in southern Beirut targeted twice by car bombs this year, on July 9 and Aug 15, killing 27 people. Its involvement in Syria has angered many Lebanese Sunni Muslims who back the country's Sunni-dominated opposition. It has also raised fears Lebanon could be engulfed by the Syrian conflict, which has killed more than 120,000 people since March 2011. "We tell those who carried out the attack, you will not be able to break us," Hezbollah lawmaker Ali Mikdad told Al-Mayadeen TV. "We got the message and we know who sent it and we know how to retaliate."

But Hezbollah chief Hassan Nasrallah pledged just last week that he would not withdraw his forces. "We have said on several occasions that the presence of our soldiers on Syrian soil is to defend… Syria, which supports the resistance" against Israel, he said. "So long as that reason exists, our presence there is justified." Nasrallah's defiance was echoed by some residents after yesterday's blasts. "Even if they do a million explosions, we will not leave the area," said Ali, accusing "Salafis from Syria" of being behind the attacks. – Agenc

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