25 killed in Assad stronghold

George Orfalian / Reuters

At least 25 people were killed following an explosion at this building and a second security site in Syria’s northern city of Aleppo on Friday.

BEIRUT — Two explosions targeted security compounds in the Syrian city of Aleppo on Friday, state media reported, saying 25 people were killed and 175 wounded in a major city that has so far largely stood by President Bashar Assad in the nearly 11-month-old uprising against his rule.

The blasts were the first significant violence in the northern city, Syria’s largest. Along with the capital Damascus, Aleppo is Syria’s economic center, home to the business community and prosperous merchant classes whose continued backing for Assad has been crucial in propping up his regime. The city has seen only occasional protests.


State TV blamed “terrorists” in the blasts, touting the regime line that armed groups looking to destabilize Syria are behind the uprising. Anti-Assad activists accused the regime of setting off the blasts to discredit the opposition and to avert protests that had been planned in the city on Friday.

PhotoBlog: Blasts hit security HQs in Aleppo

Two earlier bombings in Damascus in December and January that killed dozens prompted similar exchanges of accusations. There has been no claim of responsibility for those attacks or Friday’s.

In a live broadcast from outside the compound of the Military Intelligence Directorate, a reporter on state television said the blast had been audible 12 miles away.

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The damage shown in the footage suggested the bomb may have detonated on the road outside the five-story building. A concrete wall around it was badly damaged and its windows were blown out. At least one car appeared blackened and destroyed, and several more were damaged.

The reporter said the blast went off near a park where children were playing and claimed children were also killed.

The second blast went off outside the headquarters of a police force in another part of the city. State television cited the Health Ministry as saying 25 people were killed in the two blasts and 175 were wounded.

More disturbing evidence emerged today of how children are apparently being caught up in Syria’s savage crackdown on the people of Homs. UN secretary general Ban Ki Moon has condemned the “appalling brutality” of the onslaught. ITN’s John Ray reports. Video contains graphic images.

Reuters reported that Syria’s government vowed an “iron-fist response.”

Mohammed Abu-Nasr, an Aleppo-based activist, blamed Assad’s regime for the explosions, insisting the opposition would not carry out bombings in residential areas.

“Had the opposition wanted to detonate bombs they would not do that in a residential area,” Abu-Nasr said. “The opposition and the Free Syrian Army don’t kill civilians,” he said, referring to the force of army defectors that frequently attacks regime military forces.

Economic privileges
Abu-Nasr said the blasts came on a day when activists were planning wide protests in the city after the Friday prayers. “Despite the blasts, were will go out and protest today,” he said.

So far, Assad’s opponents have had little success in galvanizing support in Aleppo, in part because the business leaders have long traded political freedoms for economic privileges. The city of around 2 million also has a large population of Kurds, who have mostly stayed on the sidelines of the uprising since Assad’s regime began giving them citizenship, which they had long been denied.

The Aleppo blast was the latest in a string of bombings that the regime has sought to blame on the opposition, which denies any role. On Jan. 6, a suicide attack in the capital Damascus killed 26 people. Two weeks earlier, 44 people were killed in a twin suicide bombings that targeted intelligence agency compounds in Damascus.

Assad’s crackdown has killed more than 5,400 people since the uprising began in March.

‘Punishing the residents’
In another development Friday, Syrian troops who for the past six days have been bombarding the city of Homs made their first ground move of the campaign to seize one of the city’s restive neighborhoods.

Soldiers backed by tanks pushed into the neighborhood of Inshaat. The Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said troops were going from house to house detaining people.

“They are punishing the residents,” said the Observatory’s chief Rami Abdul-Rahman who added that there is lack of food in the area.

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Inshaat is adjacent to Baba Amr, a neighborhood that has been under rebel control from months. Many Syrians refer to Baba Amr as the “Misrata of Syria,” in reference to Libya’s third-largest city that was heavily damaged by troops loyal to the late Libyan leader Moammar Gadhafi.

Hundreds of people are believed to have been killed in the past week in Homs from relentless shelling and gunfire on several rebellious neighborhoods in the city, an operation activists said aimed to soften up the areas before moving in.

Troops shelled parts of the city with tanks and heavy machine guns through the night until daylight Friday, said Majd Amer, an activist in Khaldiyeh, one of the targeted districts. He said troops nearby appeared to be preparing to move into Khaldiyeh as well.

Reforms? 
Mohammed Saleh, a Syria-based activist, said the regime appears to be trying to take over rebel-held areas in Homs and the northwestern restive province of Idlib before Feb. 17, when Assad’s ruling Baath party is scheduled to hold its first general conference since 2005.

The conference is expected to move on reforms that Assad has promised in a bid to calm the uprising, but which the opposition has rejected as insincere. During the conference, Baath party leaders are expected to call for national dialogue and announce they will open the way for other political parties to play a bigger role in Syria’s politics.

State media also reported this week that a committee in charge of drafting a new constitution that reportedly removed a section that says that the Baath party is the leader of the nation and society, once a key demand by the opposition.

The Syrian opposition says it will not accept anything less than Assad’s departure. 

Reuters and The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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