Lebanon yesterday held a day of mourning for 41 people killed in twin bombings on a busy shopping street in southern Beirut, the bloodiest such attack in years, which was claimed by the Islamic State (IS) group.
More than 200 people were also wounded, many of them seriously, by the explosions on Thursday in a narrow shopping street in the Burj al-Barajneh neighborhood that is a bastion of the Shiite Hezbollah movement.
The attack appeared to mark a return to the campaign against the group between 2013 and last year, ostensibly in revenge for its military support of regime forces in neighboring Syria’s civil war.
Photo: Reuters
Two men wearing suicide vests carried out the attack, the Lebanese army said, while the body of a third who had failed to detonate his explosive device was found at the scene of the second blast.
Schools and universities were shut across Lebanon yesterday after Lebanese Prime Minister Tammam Salam announced a national day of mourning, local media said.
The street in the poor, mainly Shiite Muslim neighborhood, normally home to a market, was stained red with blood according to an AFP photographer, who saw bodies inside nearby shops.
Surrounding buildings were badly damaged by the blasts and security forces were trying to cordon off the scene and keep people from gathering.
Sunni militant group IS claimed the attack, saying its “soldiers of the Caliphate” detonated explosives planted on a motorbike on the street, in an online statement.
“After the apostates gathered in the area, one of the knights of martyrdom detonated his explosive belt in the midst of them,” the statement said, without referring to Hezbollah’s involvement in Syria, much of which is under IS control.
The statement could not be independently verified, but it followed the usual format of IS claims of responsibility and was circulated on militant online accounts.
Local television stations showed footage of wounded people being carried away by emergency services and civilians.
“I’d just arrived at the shops when the blast went off. I carried four bodies with my own hands, three women and a man, a friend of mine,” a man who gave his name as Zein al-Abideen Khaddam told local television.
Another described the sound of the explosions: “When the second blast went off, I thought the world had ended.”
The wounded were evacuated to several hospitals in the area, including the Bahman hospital in neighboring Haret Hreik.
“We’ve received dozens of wounded people and they’re continuing to arrive,” a doctor there told media.
Former Lebanese premier Saad Hariri, who leads a political bloc opposed to Hezbollah and its allies, called the attack “vile and unjustified.”
World leaders also condemned the bombings, which French President Francois Hollande called “despicable.”
The White House offered its condolences for what it described as the “horrific terrorist attacks,” vowing that “such acts of terror only reinforce our commitment to support the institutions of the Lebanese state.”
UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon called on Lebanon to “not allow this despicable act to destroy the relative calm that has prevailed in the country over the past year.”
The attacks were the deadliest to hit a Hezbollah stronghold since the group entered Syria’s civil war in support of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad. Between July 2013 and February last year, there were nine attacks on Hezbollah throughout Lebanon, mostly claimed by Sunni extremist groups.
In the most recent, in the southern suburbs of Beirut in June last year, a suicide car bomb killed a security officer.
Despite ostensibly targeting Hezbollah, the victims of the attacks have been overwhelmingly civilians.
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