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4 dead in Syria gunfire at ex-UN office Four people, including a passer-by, were killed during an hourlong battle between security forces and gunmen Tuesday evening in the diplomatic district of the Syrian capital, an Interior Ministry source told the news agency SANA.
The attackers also threw grenades at the security forces, the source said. Two of the four attackers were killed and two were captured critically wounded, the source said. One member of the security force and a Syrian woman who happened to be in the area also were killed, a security source said. Hours after the attack, Syrian state-owned television showed video of grenades, gas cylinders and bags of yellow powder found in a house said to be used by the group that set off the bomb. At least six explosions preceded the gunfire at about 8 p.m. (1 p.m. ET) in an area between the Iranian and Canadian embassies and near the residence of the British ambassador to Syria, according to witnesses. A building that once housed the United Nations peacekeeping mission was heavily damaged, witnesses said. Although it is still called a U.N. building, no U.N. employees work there, said a U.N. spokesman in New York.
Witnesses said a restaurant also was heavily damaged. The gunbattle took place on the street in the rear of the Iranian Embassy, according to a source at the British Embassy. The source said no Britons were injured. A senior State Department official said the battle was not near the U.S. Embassy. Iranian TV reported there was no damage to Iran's embassy and no injuries among the Iranians who work there. The report also said three people, armed with grenades, had been arrested. A doctor told CNN at least five civilians have been taken to hospitals for treatment and a call was issued for doctors to report to emergency rooms. The Interior Ministry source blamed the incident on the atmosphere created by instability and confusion in security and politics in the region. "The Syrian Republic ... is condemning this terrorist attack," the source said, contending it was meant to affect the stability and security of the country. Syrian political analyst Imad Shuaibi told The Associated Press he had learned that two men "attacked with hand grenades and gunfire near the Iranian and Canadian embassies."
Mazza, on the western edge of Damascus, is home to the British ambassador's home, offices of the Iranian state news agency, the Iranian Embassy and the Canadian Embassy are in Mazza. British and Iranian diplomatic officials said their embassies were not targeted in the attack. Syria has been on the U.S. State Department's list of terror-sponsoring nations for its support of groups like Hamas and Hezbollah that attack Israel. Syria, though, says the anti-Israeli groups are not terrorist, and that it has an interest in fighting Islamic extremist groups like al-Qaida. During the late 1970s and early 1980s, Syria's hard-line government fought a fierce war with Islamic fundamentalists of the Muslim Brotherhood, which was blamed for a 1980 assassination attempt on President Hafez Assad, the country's authoritarian leader who died from natural causes in 2000. Assad was succeeded by his son, Bashar Assad. In 1982, the Muslim Brotherhood staged a rebellion in the northern province of Hama. During the clashes, Syrian forces razed much of the city, killing as many as 10,000 people and finally crushing the Brotherhood after a five-year war. |
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