Car bombings ‘kill 25’ in Homs

Car bomb in al-Khudary Street in Karam al-Luz district of Homs.
Car bomb in al-Khudary Street in Karam al-Luz district of Homs.
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BBC Online :
Two car bombs have exploded in the Syrian city of Homs, killing at least 25 people and wounding scores more, state news agency Sana says.
The report blamed “terrorists” for the blasts, half an hour apart, in the Karam al-Luz district.
In a separate development, the rebel-held town of Rankous, north of Damascus, is reported to have fallen to government forces.
State TV said the final battle to capture Rankous lasted 18 hours. In a live report from the strategically important town, it said that the government victory came after weeks of intense fighting.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights – a UK-based activist group – said rebel fighters had withdrawn from Rankous at the request of residents after a truce was agreed.
The observatory – which has a network of informants on the ground – said the truce was negotiated by local officials.
The group also reported the bombings in Homs, saying they had been carried out in an area that is mostly populate by Alawites – the sect to which President Bashar al-Assad belongs.
Sana reported: “Twenty-five people fell as martyrs, including women and children, and more than 107 others were wounded after the explosion of the two car bombs.”
Over the past three years more than 100,000 Syrians have died in the war between President Assad’s forces and those opposed to his rule.
The civil war has destroyed whole neighbourhoods and forced more than nine million people from their homes.
The army is now pursuing “terrorists” who fled the Rankous area “to surrounding mountains”, Al-Manar News reported. Al-Manar is the station of the Lebanese Hezbollah movement, which is allied to the Assad government.
But the BBC’s Jim Muir in Beirut says that television footage of the town showed little to resemble the kind of massive destruction inflicted on other towns and villages that have changed hands after a struggle for control.
Our correspondent says that the restoration of state control has been hailed by official media analysts as the completion of the government’s year-long campaign to control the hilly Qalamoun area that runs along the Lebanese border.

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