Explosions Rock Weapons Warehouse On Base In Central Syria

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This photo released by the Syrian official news agency SANA, shows the rubble of a house that according to the Syrian authorities was attacked by an Israeli airstrike, in the Damascus suburbs of Hajira, Syria, Monday, April 27, 2020. The Syrian military and state media said Monday that Israeli warplanes flying over Lebanon fired missiles toward areas near the Syrian capital of Damascus, killing three civilians. An opposition war monitor says four Iran-backed fighters were also killed. The military says Syrian air defenses shot some of the missiles down. The reports said the attack happened around dawn on Monday. (SANA via AP)

BEIRUT (AP) — Explosions rocked a Syrian military base housing a weapons warehouse Friday in the country’s central Homs province causing human and material losses, the defense ministry said, explaining the cause as a “human error” in moving ammunition.

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Earlier, a local Syrian official said the cause of the explosion was not immediately clear, while the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the Syria war, said an Israeli rocket attack was suspected in hitting the weapons warehouse south of the city of Homs. The Observatory said Syrian air defenses were activated before the explosions, suggesting it was responding to an incoming attack.

Friday’s explosions wounded 10 civilians walking nearby, Homs health director Hassan al-Guindi told local Syrian media. Smoke columns could be seen from a distance and the sound of explosions echoed into Homs city.

The Observatory said the warehouse was for Lebanon’s Iran-backed Hezbollah militant group, which has backed Syria’s armed forces in the nine-year civil war.

The Israeli military declined to comment on the reports. But it has in the past targeted Iranian and Iranian-backed targets inside Syria, saying it won’t tolerate Tehran’s increasing influence along its borders.

The differences in explanations of the cause of the explosion could not be immediately reconciled. The Syrian government rarely acknowledges it is home to military posts and warehouses for Iran and Iranian-backed groups, who have been instrumental in turning the tide of the war in favor of the government.

In the past month, there have been several reports of suspected Israeli strikes on targets inside Syria, the last on Monday.

Gov. Talal Barazi said it wasn’t clear what caused Friday’s explosions.

He said the military base includes a weapons warehouse but didn’t name Hezbollah. The Observatory said the base has been used by the Lebanese militant group for years. It said the explosions caused damage to the base and reported flying debris that reached outside its perimeters.

Syrian state media also reported late Thursday that Israeli helicopters flying over the occupied Golan Heights fired at several unidentified targets causing material damage.

Israel has acknowledged carrying out scores of strikes over the years, most aimed at alleged Iranian weapons shipments believed to be bound for Hezbollah. In recent months, Israeli officials have expressed concern that Hezbollah is trying to establish production facilities to make precision-guided missiles.

In recent weeks, suspected Israeli attacks include the targeting of Iranian-backed fighters in the desert near the central Syrian town of Palmyra, and an Israeli drone attack on a SUV carrying Hezbollah members close to the border with Lebanon.

Two days after the drone attack, Israel accused Hezbollah of “provocative” activity, including multiple attempts to breach the border along the Lebanese-Israeli frontier, and said it would complain to the U.N. Security Council.


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