Islamic State group claims deadly bomb attack

Attack involved two suicide bombers, says Syrian Interior Ministry


Afp October 03, 2017
Members of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), Syrian fighters backed by US special forces, search newly taken areas near the central hospital of Raqa on October 2, 2017 SDF are battling to clear the last remaining Islamic State group jihadists holed up in their crumbling stronghold of Raqa.PHOTO:AFP

BEIRUT: The Islamic State (IS) group on Tuesday claimed a bomb attack at a police station in the Syrian capital Damascus a day earlier that killed at least 17 people.

In a statement circulated on its social media accounts, the group said three of its militants armed with guns, grenades and explosives were involved in the attack in the southern neighbourhood of Midan on Monday.

The Syrian interior ministry said on Monday that the attack involved two suicide bombers, one of whom managed to penetrate the police station and reach the first floor before his explosives detonated.

But a monitor reported a third explosion involved a car bomb outside the police station, and the IS claim also referred to the third attacker blowing himself up separately from the other two.

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a Britain-based monitoring group, said at least 17 people were killed in the attack, among them 13 police officers.

Damascus has been largely insulated from the worst of the violence during the country's brutal six-year civil war, but several bomb attacks have shaken the city.

Twin suicide bombings hit Damascus police station, leaving at least 16 dead

The Midan police station has itself been targeted before. In December 2016, three police officers were wounded when a seven-year-old girl walked into the police station wearing an explosive belt that was remotely detonated.

The regime is currently waging several offensives against IS, including in the Badiya desert region and in the eastern province of Deir Ezzor.
The banned outfit is rapidly losing territory across Syria, though it retains a handful of positions, including in the Yarmuk camp in Damascus.

More than 330,000 people have been killed in Syria since the conflict began in March 2011 with anti-government protests.

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