| 2012 al-Midan bombing | |
|---|---|
| Part of theearly insurgency phase of the Syrian civil war | |
![]() Interactive map of 2012 al-Midan bombing | |
| Location | 33°29′00″N36°17′00″E / 33.4833°N 36.2833°E /33.4833; 36.2833 Al-Midan,Damascus, Syria |
| Date | 6 January 2012 10:55 (UTC+3) |
Attack type | Suicide bombing |
| Deaths | 26[1] (including 11 police officers)[2] |
| Injured | 63 |
| Perpetrator | Al-Nusra Front |
On 6 January 2012, a bomb exploded in theAl-Midan district ofDamascus,Syria. According to the Syrian government, asuicide bomber attacked buses carrying riot police shortly before an anti-government protest was to begin. It said that 26 people were killed and over 60 were injured. Most of the victims were civilians, though the Syrian government showed footage of what it claimed to be the funeral of 11 police officers killed in the attack.[3]
It was the second such bombing since anuprising against the government began in early 2011.[4] Two weeks earlier,a double car bombing in Damascus had killed 44 people. The government blamed that attack and the 6 January attack onal Qaeda.[5] However, theSyrian opposition accused the government ofstaging the attacks to justify its crackdown on the uprising. Later, the newly formedAl-Nusra Front to Protect the Levant claimed responsibility in a video.
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The attack occurred asArab League monitors were in the country to see if Syria was abiding by Arab League demands that were said to have sought an end to the violence.[6] Two weeks earlier,a double car bombing in Damascus had killed 44 people. The government blamed that attack onIslamist militants.
Most of the initial information about the attack comes from the Syrian government andstate media. It reported that, at about 10:55,[7] a suicide bomber detonated an explosive belt beside three buses carryingriot police.[8][9] A police officer said that he had seen a man carrying a black bag walk toward a bus and then detonate the explosives.[10] The buses were parked outside a police station that was near a primary school and a mosque. The bomb detonated at a traffic light under a concreteflyover, shattering windows and destroying several police cars.[8] According to Syrian state media, it was estimated that the bomb was 10 kilograms of high explosive.[7]
Syrian state news agencySANA reported that 26 were killed (including 15 who could not be identified) and 63 were hurt.[7][11] It also said that most of the victims were civilians but that there were security personnel among the dead.[9][12] Remains, allegedly those of the bomber, were left at the scene for several hours before being taken away for DNA tests.[8] These and other body parts were repeatedly displayed for journalists who were driven to the scene by the Ministry of Information.[8] State-owned television showed a damaged bus with blood and police helmets on the seats. Interior Minister Mohammed Shaar said that the bomber "detonated himself with the aim of killing the largest number of people."
Hundreds of government loyalists later arrived at the scene, some of whom were waving flags and chanting in support ofSyrian presidentBashar al-Assad.[8] According toThe New York Times, people living in the neighborhood reported that about an hour after the bombing, security forces and armed loyalists went on "a rampage, shooting randomly and beating and arresting people in the streets".[11]
Despite the bombing, anti-governmentprotests went ahead in Damascus and elsewhere. The anti-governmentLocal Coordinating Committees said 14 protesters were killed in the suburbs of Damascus later that day.[10] It also reported that nine protesters had been killed inHama, eight were killed inHoms, three were killed inIdlib and one was killed inDeraa.[10]SANA also reported that an oil pipeline between Hama and Idlib had been blown up by a "terrorist group."[10]
The Interior Minister described themodus operandi and "intention to cause mass casualties" as having the "fingerprints ofal-Qaida."[9] Syria's interior ministry said the government would "strike back with an iron fist" to what it called "terrorist escalation".[10]
Opposition groups accused the government of staging the attack to "sully the opposition’s image"[11] and validate its own argument that it is "fighting blind violence rather than a pro-democracy movement."[13] TheFree Syrian Army (FSA), the main anti-government paramilitary group, denied involvement and condemned the attack. FSA spokesman Major Maher al-Naimi said: "This is planned and systematicstate terrorism by the security forces of the President Bashar al-Assad".[13] TheSyrian National Council issued a statement reading: "Today's bombings, in the area that has experienced the largest of the anti-regime demonstrations, clearly bear the regime's fingerprints".[10] The SyrianMuslim Brotherhood also blamed the government.[11]
On 7 January, opposition activists accused the government of making fake television footage of the aftermath. The activists pointed to three clips "mistakenly" aired by Syrian state TV. One shows what seems to be an injured man on the ground standing up just before the end of the clip. Another shows a man with a microphone (allegedly a reporter for Syrian state TV) placing "bags of vegetables" in the street to give the impression that some of the victims were civilians shopping in the nearby market. The third video shows a person putting police shields in one of the damaged vans.[14]
The same day as the bombing, Syrian opposition leader Ammar Qurabi claimed that the government was planning another bombing inAleppo "to terrorize the people". He said he had learned of the plot from Syrian security officials.[15]
At the end of February a group called theal-Nusra Front claimed responsibility for the attack and placed a 45-minute video on the Internet showing its preparation.[16]