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Explosions near Iranian Embassy in Beirut kill 23 | ASHARQ AL-AWSAT English Archive 2005 -2017
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Two Lebanese men react in front of burned cars at the scene of two explosions that struck near the Iranian Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, on November 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)


Two Lebanese men react in front of burned cars at the scene of two explosions that struck near the Iranian Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, on November 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

Two Lebanese men react in front of burned cars at the scene of two explosions that struck near the Iranian Embassy in Beirut, Lebanon, on November 19, 2013. (AP Photo/Hussein Malla)

UPDATE 3:30 pm GMT: Beirut, AP—A Lebanese Al-Qaeda-linked group, the Abdullah Azzam Brigades, has claimed responsibility for Tuesday’s attacks, saying they would continue until Hezbollah withdraws its forces from Syria.

The authenticity of the claim could not be independently verified, but it was posted on a militant website and on the Twitter account of Sirajuddin Zurayqat, a spokesman for the Azzam Brigades.

The group is active in southern Lebanon and has issued claims in the past for rocket attacks into northern Israel. It has also claimed a July 2010 bombing of a Japanese oil tanker in the Persian Gulf and a 2005 rocket attack that narrowly missed a US amphibious assault ship docked at Jordan’s Aqaba Red Sea resort.


10:25 am GMT: Two suicide bombings struck Tuesday near the Iranian Embassy in the Lebanese capital of Beirut, killing 23 people, including the Iranian cultural attaché.

The mid-morning blasts hit Beirut’s upscale neighborhood of Janah, a stronghold of the Iranian-backed Shiite Muslim Hezbollah group. One explosion blew out the large black main gate of the Iranian mission,
damaging the three-story facility.

It was not immediately clear if the attack was related to the conflict next door in Syria, but attacks have targeted Hezbollah strongholds in recent months in what many see as retaliation by Sunni extremists for the militant Shiite group’s role in the Syrian civil war.

Hezbollah fighters have been fighting alongside Syrian President Bashar Al-Assad’s forces against largely Sunni rebels seeking to topple his government.

Iranian Ambassador Ghazanfar Roknabadi identified the dead diplomat as Sheikh Ibrahim Ansari. Speaking to Hezbollah’s Al-Manar TV, he said Ansari took his post in Lebanon a month ago and was overseeing all regional cultural activities.

Lebanese Health Minister Ali Hassan Khalil said 23 people were killed and 146 wounded in the blasts.
Debris was scattered on the street and cars were on fire as people ran away from the chaotic scene. The second blast was yards away from the embassy building.

AP video showed firefighters extinguishing flames from vehicles, blood-spattered streets and bodies covered with sheets on the ground. A charred motorcycle stood outside the embassy gate.

An armed guard at the embassy told AP that the first blast was believed to have been carried out by a suicide attacker who rode a motorcycle and blew himself up outside the gate. The guard, speaking on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to talk to media, said the other explosion, which caused much more damage, was likely a car bomb.

Lebanese security officials confirmed the two bombings were both suicide attacks. They spoke on condition of anonymity in line with regulations.

“We tell those who carried out the attack, you will not be able to break us,” Hezbollah lawmaker Ali Mikdad told Al-Mayadeen TV. “We got the message and we know who sent it and we know how to retaliate.”

Hezbollah’s Al-Rasoul Al-Azam hospital called on people to donate blood, saying they need all blood types.
Iran has been one of Assad’s strongest supporters, supplying him with money and weapons since the Syrian crisis began in March 2011.

An August 15 car bombing in a Shi’ite stronghold of Hezbollah in the southern suburbs of Beirut killed 27 people and wounded more than 300. A less powerful car bomb targeted the same area on July 9, wounding more than 50 people.