BEIRUT, Lebanon ? Suicide attackers detonated two powerful car bombs outside government offices in Damascus on Friday, killing and wounding an unspecified number of people at the State Security Directorate headquarters and another security installation, according to SANA, the government news agency. �
SANA said that many civilians and members of the military were killed but the majority of the victims were civilians.
The news agency said that the initial investigation indicated that terrorists associated with Al Qaeda were responsible.
Video footage broadcast by Al Dunia, a private television station which hews to the government?s positions, showed men carrying mangled bodies on blankets, bloody debris, damaged cars and large hole in one of the buildings.
�The attack capped one of the deadliest weeks in Syria since the start of a popular uprising in March. �Over several days last week, more than 160 defecting soldiers, civilians and anti-government activists were killed in government attacks, according to human rights activists.
The bombings on Friday occurred hours before thousands of protesters were set to demonstrate against an Arab League peace plan to end the violence.�
Delegates from the Arab League traveled to Damascus on Thursday to start monitoring the government?s promise to end its violent suppression of the nine-month-old uprising. The visit is intended to set the ground rules for a mission that is supposed to bring hundreds of observers to Syria in the coming weeks.
Human rights activists said the government was continuing its assault on the Jebel al-Zawiyah area of northwestern Syria, near Turkey?s border, where at least 160 people have reportedly been killed this week.
The assault, using helicopters and tanks, appeared aimed at army defectors trying to create a rebel stronghold, with supply routes across the Turkish border.
The highest toll was reported in Kafr Oweid, a village. A video posted on the Internet on Thursday was said by activists to show the bodies of dozens of men killed in the village, many with badly mangled faces. The video, posted by the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, based in London, showed at least 43 bodies.
Opposition figures say the government is trying to silence pockets of resistance before the observers visit. They expressed growing concern about the Arab League mission, questioning whether it would be robust enough to detect what they said was a campaign of deadly violence by President Bashar al-Assad?s security forces.
Turkey added strong criticism on Thursday to the international condemnation of Syria?s latest crackdown. A statement by the Turkish Foreign Ministry urged Syria to end its ?policy of oppression.?
The United Nations says that at least 5,000 people have died in the Syrian conflict. On Thursday, Avaaz, a human rights group that helps document protests, released a higher estimate, saying it had collected the names of 6,237 people who had been killed, including more than 800 women and children and 917 members of the government forces.
Casualty figures in Syria have been nearly impossible to confirm. Journalists and human rights groups are not free to move around the country, and there are wide disparities between the claims of the government and those of opposition groups, and between the claims of different networks of human rights activists.
The observers are supposed to monitor Mr. Assad?s compliance with a plan for him to withdraw his forces from residential areas and to release political prisoners. The head of the delegation, Samir Seif el-Yazal, said it would work with Syrian officials to decide where to send the observers, The Associated Press reported. A team of military and human rights experts is scheduled to arrive in a few days.
But human rights activists said there was still no final list of observers and no clear rules for the mission. Wissam Tarif, the Arab world campaigner for Avaaz, who said he was a candidate for an observer post, said the delegation was still working out details, including whether observers would travel with their own security.
Opposition groups have also criticized the decision to name a Sudanese general to lead the mission ? Lt. Gen. Muhammad Ahmed Mustafa al-Dabi, a former head of military intelligence who served as a coordinator among the Sudanese government, the United Nations and African Union peacekeepers in Darfur.
Ammar al-Wawi, a former colonel in the Syrian Army who defected to the rebels, said: ?We are suspicious about these observers. Do you send a veterinarian to do a Caesarean section??
General Dabi told Reuters that the observers would work ?with complete transparency.?
Across Syria on Thursday, at least 35 people were killed, including 25 in the city of Homs and 7 in Idlib, near Jebel al-Zawiyah, according to the Local Coordination Committees, an opposition umbrella group. A militia of army defectors, the Free Syrian Army, said that at least 70 recent defectors were killed this week, and that groups of defectors were hiding in the mountains, surrounded by government forces.
Source: http://feeds.nytimes.com/click.phdo?i=85c6ba3adc2a5bb5d070221b90aed21a
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