At least 40 killed in Damascus bombing targeting Shi'ites

Security forces inspect the site of attack on a military hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, that killed at least 30 people. Picture: Rahmat Gul/AP

Security forces inspect the site of attack on a military hospital in Kabul, Afghanistan, that killed at least 30 people. Picture: Rahmat Gul/AP

Published Mar 11, 2017

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Beirut - A double bomb

attack targeting Shi'ite pilgrims in Damascus killed at least 40

Iraqis and wounded 120 more who were going to pray at a nearby

shrine, the Iraqi foreign ministry said.

There was no immediate claim of responsibility for

Saturday's attack, which the Hezbollah-run al-Manar TV station

said had been carried out by two suicide bombers.

Footage broadcast by Syrian state TV showed two badly

damaged buses with their windows blown out. The area was

splattered with blood and shoes were scattered on the ground.

Syrian President Bashar al-Assad has been supported in the

country's war by Shi'ite militias from countries including Iraq,

Afghanistan and Lebanon.

The attack took place at a bus station where the pilgrims

had been brought to visit the nearby Bab al-Saghir cemetery,

named after one of the seven gates of the Old City of Damascus.

The second blast went off some 10 minutes after the first,

inflicting casualties on civil defence workers who had gathered

to tend to the casualties, the Damascus correspondent for

al-Manar told the station by phone.

The pilgrims were due to pray at the cemetery after visiting

the Sayeda Zeinab shrine just outside Damascus, he said.

Sayeda Zeinab - the granddaughter of the Prophet Mohammad -

is venerated by Shi'ites and her shrine is a site of mass

pilgrimage for Shi'ites from across the world. It has also been

a magnet for Shi'ite militiamen in Syria.

Iran has backed Assad in the conflict that erupted in 2011.

Last June, Islamic State claimed responsibility for bomb

attacks near the Sayyida Zeinab shrine.

The Lebanese group Hezbollah is also fighting in support of

Assad. 

REUTERS

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