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Suicide bombing kills 4 in Hezbollah area of south Beirut

by Reuters
Tuesday, 21 January 2014 12:15 GMT

Civil defence members extinguish a fire at the site of an explosion in the Haret Hreik area, in the southern suburbs of the Lebanese capital Beirut, Lebanon, January 21, 2014. REUTERS/Khalil Hassan

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Hezbollah's strongholds in Lebanon have meanwhile been hit by a string of rocket and bomb attacks claimed by hardline Sunni militants.

* At least 20 more wounded in attack -security sources

* Hezbollah areas have been hit by series of bombs, rockets

* Car bomb detonated near site of previous explosion 

By Laila Bassam

BEIRUT, Jan 21 (Reuters) - A suicide bomber killed four people on Tuesday in a residential district of southern Beirut known for its support of the powerful Shi'ite Muslim military and political movement Hezbollah, security sources said.

Tensions from Syria's conflict have increasingly infected neighbouring Lebanon. Hezbollah has sent fighters and advisers to help its ally President Bashar al-Assad, a member of the Shi'ite-derived Alawite minority, against mainly Sunni rebels.

A Reuters reporter said she saw the remains of what appeared to be the suicide attacker as emergency workers transported wounded people from the blast site, less than 100 meters from where another bomb exploded this month.

"I was passing in the street and the explosion went off," a wounded man at a nearby hospital, Kamal Abdel Ali, said. "I don't know how but I flew and fell to the ground."

Flames erupted from a building and a thick plume of smoke billowed over the street near the charred remains of cars as a crowd gathered at the site of the attack.

The blast occurred on a busy street of small shops and restaurants in the Haret Hreik area of the Lebanese capital's largely Shi'ite southern suburbs and fit the profile of previous attacks against Hezbollah targets claimed by Sunni militants.

A Twitter account purportedly run by the Lebanese branch of the Nusra Front, a Syrian rebel group with links to al Qaeda, said it carried out the attack, but it was not possible to verify the claim.

Hezbollah's strongholds in Lebanon have been hit by a string of rocket and bomb attacks, including one in Haret Hreik on Jan. 2 that killed at least five people.

Politicians in Lebanon, still struggling to recover from its own 1975-1990 civil war and without a fully functioning government since March, condemned Tuesday's bombing.

"Today it is clear that we are living through the latest episode in a series of organised terrorist acts which is targeting the stability and security of the country," caretaker Health Minister Ali Hassan Khalil told Lebanon's Al-Jadeed television.

A STRING OF ATTACKS

Security sources told Reuters that four people had died in Tuesday's attack and at least 20 more were wounded.

The bombing was the third to target a centre of Hezbollah support this year. The first of those came less than a week after a car bomb killed former finance minister Mohamad Chatah, a critic of Hezbollah and Assad, and six others in Beirut.

Officials from the Shi'ite movement often frame the attacks on their centres of support in Lebanon, as well as their involvement in Syria, as part of a broader struggle pitting regional and international powers against one another.

In another sign of the Syrian conflict's spillover, fighting reignited in the northern city of Tripoli, where at least seven people have died since Saturday in fighting between factions who support different sides in Syria's civil war.

A civilian was killed on Tuesday in clashes between the army and militants and two soldiers were wounded in the city, which is about 70 km (40 miles) north of Beirut, security and medical sources said.

Rocket fire from Syria killed at least seven people in the border town of Arsal on Friday, a day after a suicide car bomber killed three people in Hermel, a largely Shi'ite town supportive of Hezbollah also near the border with Syria.

Former Lebanese Prime Minister Saad al-Hariri told Reuters last week he was ready to share power with Hezbollah if that was what it took to help end the country's political deadlock. 

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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