2012_Damascus_bombing

List of terrorist attacks in Damascus

List of terrorist attacks in Damascus

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This is a list of terror attacks in Damascus within modern Syria (after independence in 1946).

1949

On Friday night, August 5, 1949, several hand grenades were thrown into the Menarsha Synagogue in Damascus. 12 Jews, eight of them children,[1] were killed and about 30 others injured. The attack was timed to coincide with the Lausanne Conference, following the armistice agreement which was signed between Israel and Syria on July 20, 1949.[2]

1986

The deadliest bombings were executed in Damascus and surrounding areas in 1986. The events caused 144 fatalities, and were blamed by the Syrian authorities upon Iraqi Ba'athist agents, though other alleged perpetrators, like the Muslim Brotherhood, were proposed.

2004

  • April 28: Three gunmen, a policeman, and one civilian were killed in an attack on the diplomatic quarter of Damascus, damaging a building formerly used by the UN.[3] Police blamed Islamists.[4]

2006

  • June 2: Four gunmen and two security guards were killed when Syrian security forces foiled an attack by Islamist militants near the studios of Syrian National Television.[5][6]
  • September 12: Three gunmen and a Syrian security guard were killed in a foiled attack on the U.S. embassy. Gunmen tossed grenades over the perimeter walls before opening fire with automatic weapons. A car bomb was detonated outside the embassy, although a truck bomb filled with pipe bombs and gas cylinders failed to explode.[7] Thirteen people were wounded, including two security guards and a Chinese diplomat.[8] Police also captured one gunman, although he later died of his wounds.[9] The Syrian government said the attack was planned in Saudi Arabia and the attackers had no links to al-Qaeda.[10]

2008

2009

  • December 3: A little more than year later another explosion killed at least three people when a bus blew up in Sayyidah Zaynab, a Damascus suburb popular with Iranian and other Shiite pilgrims and named after a shrine dedicated to the granddaughter of Muhammad located there. Syrian officials denied Terrorism was involved, blaming the deaths on an exploding tire and banned reporters from the site.[11]

2011

2012

2013

2016

2017

See also


References

  1. Moshe Gat. The Jewish exodus from Iraq, 1948-1951, Routledge, 1997. pg. 188. ISBN 0-7146-4689-X.
  2. "The Islamic Revival in Syria (September-October 2006)". www.mideastmonitor.org. Archived from the original on 2007-02-22.

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