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19 March 2024

48 dead as bombs tear into heart of Syria's Aleppo

In this photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, Syrian men walk at a street between destroyed buildings where triple bombs rocked at the Saadallah al-Jabri square, in Aleppo city, Syria. Three powerful explosions rocked the main square in a government-controlled central district of Aleppo on Wednesday, the Syrian state-run TV said. Activists reported multiple casualties and heavy material damage. (AP)

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By AFP

Three car bombs tore Wednesday into the heart of Aleppo, killing 48 people and wounding 100, mostly soldiers, a watchdog said, as television showed scenes of devastation in Syria's commercial capital.

Also Wednesday, the army launched a major offensive against rebel bastions near the capital Damascus, shelling neighbourhoods and making mass arrests, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and AFP journalists said.

Two car bombs exploded in quick succession around Aleppo's Saadallah al-Jabiri Square near a military officers' club and a hotel. A third bomb went off soon afterwards at the nearby Bab Jnein district at an entrance to the Old City, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and a military source said.

The Britain-based Observatory, citing medical sources, said at least 48 people died and almost 100 were injured. "Most of them were regime troops," it said.

A local official put the toll at "37 dead and dozens injured."

Near the officers' club, part of the facade of a hotel was destroyed by the force of the blasts, an AFP correspondent at the scene said, adding that a two-storey cafe collapsed completely.

"We heard two enormous explosions, as though the gates of hell were opening," Hassan, a 30-year-old man who works in a nearby hotel, told AFP.

"I saw thick smoke, and I helped a woman on the pavement whose arms and legs were completely dislocated," said Hassan, who gave only one name.

A shopowner whose store is located a block away from the officers' club said: "I pulled out from the rubble a child less than 10 years old who has lost a leg."

Official television channel Al-Ikhbariya showed people evacuating some of the victims.

Elsewhere, rebel fighters attacked a political intelligence branch in Aleppo as well as an old vegetable market where a large number of troops were posted, said the Observatory. Overnight, rebels also destroyed two tanks in the city.

Aleppo, with a population of 1.7 million people, has been one of the focal points of the conflict since mid-July, when the army promised the "mother of all battles" to clear the city of rebels.

Since Thursday, the fighting has become more intense, spilling at the weekend into the centuries-old UNESCO-listed souk in the heart of Aleppo and sparking a fire that damaged hundreds of shops.

"The rebels are now attacking regime troops in the heart of the city," Observatory director Abdel Rahman told AFP. "Before, the centre was spared from violence. Now, we can say that barring some districts, Aleppo is no longer a safe city."

Abdel Rahman added: "This is part of the decisive battle, and the regime can no longer claim to control the city."

Bombings have increasingly become part of the unrest ravaging Syria, which began in March last year as peaceful protests for reform but has since morphed into an armed insurgency, with more than 31,000 people killed, according to activists.

On July 18, rebels carried out a massive bombing on a complex in Damascus, killing four security chiefs, including President Bashar al-Assad's brother-in-law and the defence minister.

Regime forces have since pushed the rebels to a string of towns and neighbourhoods on the outskirts of the Damascus, but they have lost control of several border crossings and are still battling to retake Aleppo.

Major military operation near Damascus

The army on Wednesday turned its focus on Qudsaya, west of Damascus, and a neighbouring locality, deploying troops heavily and making arrests, the Observatory said.

"The army is carrying out a major military operation on the outskirts of Qudsaya and Hameh, shelling the area," said Abdel Rahman.

A Damascus-based activist who identified herself only as Alexia corroborated the report, saying "the army is shelling intensely the area of Qudsaya and Hameh."

"The army has attacked the area before, but not as intensely as this time," she told AFP by Internet.

The offensive comes after the official daily Al-Baath reported that the "end of security operations throughout Damascus province" was approaching.

Government forces "have destroyed many weapons caches and seized large quantities of ammunition and equipment... which indicates that the end of security operations throughout Damascus province is approaching," the newspaper said on Tuesday.

The UN-Arab League envoy to Syria, Lakhdar Brahimi, is due back in the region this week to try to revive talks aimed at ending the bloodshed, officials said.

Jan Eliasson, deputy to the UN chief, said he did not know if Brahimi would be able to enter Syria, but hoped to persuade the Assad regime to "go in the direction of a reduction of violence."