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    Tuesday, November 19, 2013

    Lebanon Blasts Hit Iran's Embassy in Beirut

    The scale of the damage is huge"
     At least 22 people have been killed and more than 140 injured in a double suicide bombing outside the Iranian embassy in the Lebanese capital Beirut.There are conflicting reports as to whether the Iranian cultural attache died in the attack.

    Iran is a major backer of the Lebanese Shia militant group Hezbollah, which has sent fighters to Syria to back the government of Bashar al-Assad.

    The Sunni jihadist group Abdullah Azzam Brigades said it was behind the attack. The head of the al-Qaeda-linked group described the attack as a "double martyrdom operation carried out by two heroes from the heroic Sunnis of Lebanon".

    The conflict in Syria has increased sectarian tensions in its smaller neighbour. Lebanese Sunni Muslim fighters have joined forces with the mainly Sunni rebels in Syria. Some of the rebel groups are affiliated with al-Qaeda. Syria's President Assad comes from the Alawite sect, a heterodox offshoot of Shia Islam.

    The BBC's Paul Wood, in Beirut, says the number of people killed in Tuesday's attack makes it one of the worst in Shia southern Beirut since the war across the border in Syria began. But more significantly, he says, it is the first attack on an Iranian target.

    Confusion over diplomat
    The Iranian ambassador in Beirut had earlier confirmed cultural attache Ebrahim Ansari's death to Hezbollah's al-Manar TV, saying it was not clear if he had been in the embassy itself or one of the residential buildings nearby.

    However, the Iranian foreign ministry now says he is alive. Mr Ansari had only taken up his post a month ago.
    Carine Torbey, who is at the scene, says security forces are still trying to rescue anyone who may be trapped in the rubble, while Hezbollah fighters are searching everyone who wants to enter the area. Lebanese officials said the first suicide attacker was on a motorcycle, while the second was in a four-wheel drive vehicle.

    People gathered at the scene of the two blasts near the Iranian embassy in the neighbourhood of Janah, a Hezbollah stronghold

    More than 140 people were wounded by the double blast on Tuesday morning

    Reuters new agency quotes Lebanese officials as saying CCTV footage showed a man rushing towards the outer wall of the Iranian embassy before blowing himself up, causing the first blast.


    The Iranian ambassador blamed Israel for the attack - an accusation Israel swiftly rejected.

    Tzachi Hanegbi, a member of the foreign affairs and defence committee in the Israeli parliament, said Israel played "no part" in the incident.

    The Syrian government condemned the attack, as did UK Foreign Secretary William Hague, saying: "The UK is strongly committed to supporting stability in Lebanon and seeing those responsible for this attack brought to justice."

    Iran and Lebanon are due to play a football match in Beirut as scheduled on Tuesday evening, but without spectators, Lebanese media report.

    South Beirut, including the area around the Iranian embassy, is considered a Hezbollah stronghold. It has been hit by several attacks in recent months.

    Caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati called the attack "a cowardly terrorist act", Lebanese state news agency NNA reported.

    "The aim of the blast is to stir up the situation in Lebanon and use the Lebanese arena to convey messages," he said. This is not the first time the Syrian conflict has spilled over into violence in Lebanon.

    On 15 August, 27 people were killed in a car bomb in south Beirut believed to have been targeting a Sunni Muslim cleric opposed to Hezbollah. The cleric was unhurt. Later in August, more than 40 people were killed in two blasts outside mosques in Tripoli.

    Syrian rebels beaten back
    Meanwhile, inside Syria, the government appears to be winning its attempt to cut off one of the rebels' last remaining supply routes across the Lebanese border.

    The Syrian army has taken control of the town of Qara after three days of fighting. The rebel group Jabat al-Nusra declared that it and other rebel forces had withdrawn.

    The Syrian government now controls the road linking the coast to the capital. The rebel-held suburbs around Damascus, which are already under siege and bombardment, will now be under even more pressure.

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