The
al-Qaeda-affiliated Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) on Saturday
claimed responsibility for the suicide car bombing last week in the stronghold
of the “criminal” Shiite militant group Hezbollah.
ISIL penetrated the “security system of the Party of
Satan (Hezbollah)... and crush its strongholds... in a first small payment from
the heavy account that is awaiting those wicked criminals,” Agence
France-Presse quoted the al-Qaeda-linked group as saying in a statement posted
onto a website page used by Sunni militants.
The bombing, which took place Thursday in Beirut’s
Haret Hreik district, killed at least five people and wounded 77.
It was the latest in a wave of attacks to hit Lebanon
in recent months as Syria’s civil war spills into its smaller neighbor.
Hezbollah’s fighters are aiding Syrian President
Bashar al-Assad in a civil war that pits him largely against Sunni Muslims,
including ISIL.
The army, meanwhile, said Saturday that a young man
from northern Lebanon was the bomber who blew himself up.
“The DNA test results on the remains of a suicide
attacker found in the car used in the bomb attack... confirm they belong to the
youth Qutaiba al-Satem,” said the army.
It added: “Investigations are ongoing by the relevant
judicial authorities to uncover the full details of the event.”
An official from Satem’s native Sunni-majority area of
Wadi Khaled told AFP on Friday suspicions over the 20-year-old’s role were
based on a family document found at the scene of the blast.
Satem’s father was then called in for DNA tests.
ISIL is battling to impose their extreme version of
Islamic law in the region.
In a related story, an alliance of Islamist and other
rebel factions battled ISIL fighters across north-western Syria on Saturday in
apparently coordinated strikes against the powerful al-Qaeda-linked group.
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