A car bomb rocked a stronghold of the Shiite militant Hezbollah
group south of the Lebanese capital Tuesday, wounding at least 53 people and
setting several cars ablaze in the most serious knock-on effect from Syria's
civil war on its smaller neighbor since the Syrian crisis began, officials said
to AP.
Few hours later, the Syrian
Activists circulated a statement attributed to the leadership of the
"Brigade 313- Special Tasks" adopting the car bomb attack. ''This
attack is not the first and will not be the last,'' the rebels of 313-brigade
said according to Zaman Alwasl Arabic.
''We will hit Hezbollah whenever we reach, whether Lebanon or anywhere
else.''
The powerful blast struck a bustling commercial and residential
neighborhood as many Lebanese Shiite Muslims began observing the holy month of
Ramadan, and is the worst explosion to hit Beirut's southern suburbs in years.
While there was no immediate claim of responsibility, there have been growing
fears in Lebanon that Hezbollah could face retaliation for its now overt role
fighting alongside President Bashar Assad's troops inside Syria, including,
activists say, in the embattled city of Homs near the Lebanese border.
The bombing also is likely to inflame already simmering tensions in
Lebanon itself, where deadly clashes between Shiites and Sunnis have grown
increasingly common as the civil war in Syria has taken on ever darker
sectarian overtones. Some Sunnis in Lebanon, many of whom support Syria's
rebels, have expressed growing resentment over what they see as Hezbollah's
unchecked power in the country.
Tuesday's blast struck the area of Beir el-Abed, and was most
likely caused by a car bomb, officials said on condition of anonymity in line
with regulations. They said it went off in the parking lot near the Islamic
Coop, a supermarket usually packed with shoppers, and a petrol station.
"The explosion was so strong I thought it
was an Israeli air raid," said Mohammad al-Zein, who lives near the blast
site. "My wife was sleeping in bed and all the glass fell on her, injuring
her in the mouth, arms and legs."
Another resident said that he was fasting on the first day of
Ramadan and was on his way to shop for the evening meal that would break his
daylong fast.
"I was riding my motorcycle on my way to
a sweets shop and then there was this massive explosion that knocked me off and
I fell on the ground," said a 52-year-old employee of a private company.
He declined to be named out of security concerns.
Health Minister Ali Hassan Khalil said 53 people were wounded. He
said most of injuries were light, and that many of them were caused by breaking
glass.
The parking lot where the bomb went off is a few hundred meters
(yards) away from what is known as Hezbollah's "security square,"
where many of the party's officials live and have offices. Hezbollah leader
Hassan Nasrallah received dignitaries there before the 2006 war. The area was
bombed by Israel in that conflict and Nasrallah has gone underground since
then, only rarely appearing in public and never for more than few minutes,
fearing Israeli assassination.
"This
(blast) is a message, but we will not
bow," said Ziad Waked, a municipal official speaking to Hezbollah's Al-Manar
television.
With smoke still hanging in the air after the bombing, a group of
about 100 outraged Hezbollah supporters stormed through the area, carrying
aloft pictures of Nasrallah, shouting in
support of their leader and chanting sectarian slogans.
Hezbollah operatives fired in the air to disperse people who
attacked the interior minister with stones after he inspected the scene of the
blast, trapping him for 45 minutes in a building before he was escorted through
a backdoor.
"The Shiite blood is boiling," the
Hezbollah supporters shouted.
Minister Marwan Charbel is seen by some Shiites as sympathetic to
hardline Sunni cleric Ahmad al-Assir, who was agitating against Hezbollah for
months and is now on the run.
Tuesday's explosion is one of the biggest in the capital's southern
suburbs since the end Lebanon's 15-year civil war in 1990, and a major breach
of a tightly controlled, high security area.
"It is a large area heavily populated. No
force in the world can protect every area and every street," Hezbollah
lawmaker Ali Moqdad said. "Such acts are a reminder of darker days which
the Lebanese would like to erase from their memories."
Television footage from the scene revived memories of that
conflict, when car bombs set by sectarian groups were common. There have been
numerous car bombs targeting politicians and journalists since then, but random
car bombings have been rare.
Hezbollah operatives in civilian clothes, some of them carrying
Kalashnikov rifles, cordoned off the site of the explosion with yellow ribbons.
They and Lebanese security officials barred journalists from approaching the
site itself.
Ambulances and fire engines with wailing sirens raced to the area,
and witnesses said casualties were rushed to two nearby hospitals.
The power of the explosion shattered windows and damaged several
buildings in the busy residential and commercial area. A security official said
the bomb was placed in a car and that it weighed 35 kilograms (70 pounds).
In May, two rockets slammed into a Hezbollah stronghold in south
Beirut, wounding four people. The rockets struck hours after Nasrallah vowed in
a speech to help propel Assad to victory in Syria's civil war. In June, a
rocket slammed into the same area, causing no casualties.
Hezbollah has openly joined the fight in Syria, and the group's
fighters were instrumental in a recent regime victory when government forces
regained control of the strategic town of Qusair near the Lebanese border.
Lebanon's Sunni Muslims mostly back the overwhelmingly Sunni rebels
in Syria, while many Shiites support Assad, who is a member of Syria's minority
Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam.
(with AP)
Zaman Alwasl
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