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Lebanon security chief survives bomb attack


Two people have been killed after a suicide bomber blew himself up at a Lebanese security checkpoint in the eastern Bekaa Valley, according to officials.

Al Jazeera's Rula Amin, reporting from area of the explosion said, that Lebanese security chief Abbas Ibrahim was the target of the "assassination attempt". Abbas was unharmed but at least one officer was killed and 20 others were injured in the explosion.

No one immediately claimed responsibility for Friday’s attack.

The checkpoint is situated on the main highway joining Beirut and Damascus, in an area where Sunni Muslim armed groups are fighting to topple Syrian President Bashar al-Assad and have been targeting his key Lebanese ally, the Shia group Hezbollah.

Our correspondent said that the attack took place as authorities were on "high alert" following reports of a plot to target security posts in Lebanon.

Ibrahim said he passed through the checkpoint on the main highway between Beirut and Damascus minutes before the bomber blew himself up, just 200 metres away from his convoy.

'Miraculous escape'

"We miraculously escaped," Ibrahim told Reuters, adding that many officials in Lebanon were being targeted by the reactivation of "terrorist sleeper cells".

"But the security services are ready and on alert to stop them and we won't become another Iraq," he said in reference to the fighting between Shia and Sunni factions in Iraq, where Sunni armed groups have seized wide swathes of territory.

Ibrahim, a Shia who heads Lebanon's Directorate of General Security (DGS), confirmed that security officials had information that Sunni fighters were aiming to assassinate him.

"We were suspicious of the (bomber's) car when we were on our way and when the car stopped at the Dahr al-Baydar checkpoint, the explosion went off," he said.

Earlier on Friday, Lebanese authorities arrested at least 17 "foreigners" allegedly linked to the plot.

Security forces raided at least one hotel in the Beirut's bustling Hamra district over suspected "terrorist cells" inside it, a police official said.

Lebanon has been on edge, bracing for renewed violence as a result of the surge by armed fighters in neighbouring Syria and also in Iraq.



Al Jazeera
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