Two suicide blasts kill 43 in Lebanon

Lebanese soldiers and civilians rush to help after suicide bombings Thursday in the Beiruit suburb of Burj al-Barajneh.
Lebanese soldiers and civilians rush to help after suicide bombings Thursday in the Beiruit suburb of Burj al-Barajneh.

BEIRUT — Twin suicide bombings struck a southern Beirut suburb that’s a stronghold of the Shiite Hezbollah group Thursday evening, killing at least 43 people and wounding scores more in one of the deadliest attacks in years in Lebanon.

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AP

Lebanese soldiers arrest a suspected attacker Thursday near the scene of a twin suicide attack in Burj al-Barajneh, southern Beirut Lebanon. The attacks struck a Shiite suburb killed and wounded dozens, according to a Lebanese official.

The attack was claimed by the Islamic State group, which is fighting in Syria and Iraq but has until now not had a recognized affiliate in Lebanon, although the tiny Mediterranean country has in the past years faced deadly spillovers from the civil war next door.

The explosions hit minutes apart during rush hour in an area of southern Beirut called Burj al-Barajneh, a stronghold of the militant Hezbollah group. Hezbollah has been fighting in Syria along with Syrian President Bashar Assad’s forces. The area has been hit in the past, and Sunni militant groups have threatened to carry out more such attacks.

Along with the 43 killed, the attack also left more than 239 wounded, George Kittaneh, head of Lebanese Red Cross operations, told the state-run National News Agency.

It was not clear how many attackers were involved. According to a Lebanese security official, the first suicide attacker detonated his explosives’ vest outside a Shiite mosque, while the second blew himself up inside a nearby bakery.

An apparent third attacker was found dead, his legs blown off while he still wore an intact explosives’ belt, said the official, speaking on condition of anonymity in line with regulations. The official speculated that the third may have been killed from the explosion of the second suicide bomber, as he was reportedly close to that blast.

The Al-Mayadeen TV also reported there was a third would-be suicide attacker and showed a video of a bearded man who wore an explosives belt. The report said he was killed before he could detonate his explosives.

Hospitals in southern Beirut were calling on people to donate blood and appealed to residents not to gather at the hospital gates so that ambulance and emergency personnel could work unhindered.

Shortly after the explosions, ambulances rushed to the area and started evacuating the wounded and the dead as Lebanese troops and Hezbollah gunmen cordoned the area, preventing anyone from getting close to the sites of the blasts, which were less than 50 yards apart.

“There is a massacre inside, and we will not let you take photos,” a Hezbollah member screamed at a photographer at the scene shortly after the explosions. An hour later, ambulance sirens still could be heard in Beirut streets.

Hezbollah also called on people to leave all coffee shops in the area and urged residents to inform the group about any suspicious moves.

The Islamic State posted its claim of responsibility for the bombings on social media pages linked to the Sunni militant group. The claim could not be independently verified, but it was similar to other Islamic State claims.

The Islamic State said the attack was carried out by detonating an explosives-laden motorcycle close to a gathering of Shiites — a likely reference to the mosque — and followed by a suicide bombing. The statement made no mention of a third would-be bomber.

“Let the Shiite apostates know that we will not rest until we take revenge in the name of the Prophet [Muhammad],” the Islamic State said.

This is the second attack in Beirut to date that has been claimed by the Islamic State, after a January 2014 bombing in the district of Haret Hreik, according to the U.S.-based SITE Intelligence Group, which tracks militants’ messages on the Internet.

Syria’s civil war has spilled over into Lebanon on multiple occasions, inflaming sectarian tensions between the country’s Sunnis and Shiites and leaving scores dead.

The Lebanese Sunni and Shiite communities have lined up on opposing sides of Syria’s civil war — Sunnis broadly support the Sunni rebels fighting against Assad while the Shiites typically back Assad.

Lebanon also hosts more than 1.1 million Syrian refugees, equivalent to a quarter of the country’s population.

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