12/27/09
from the Jerusalem Post
Hamas-linked car explodes near Beirut
Three bombs planted under a car exploded south of Beirut on Saturday, killing
two people and wounding several others in an attack that apparently targeted an
official from the Palestinian terror group Hamas, the state-run news agency
said.
The official National News Agency said the explosion was caused by "three bombs
tied to each other" that were placed under the car of an official believed to be
from Hamas.
It did not identify the targeted official or the victims. One of the wounded was
in serious condition, the report said.
A Hamas spokesman confirmed on Sunday morning that two members of the
organization were killed and three others were wounded in the explosion.
The spokesman, Ayman Taha, told the Al-Arabiya news network that Hamas was
investigating the circumstances of the blast.
Lebanese security officials told The Associated Press they could not
independently confirm what caused the blasts or who the explosions targeted. The
Lebanese militant group Hizbullah, which controls the area, sealed off the
streets in the southern suburb of Haret Hreik and prevented journalists from
getting close to the scene.
One senior police official said the blast occurred in a neighborhood that houses
an office belonging to Hamas.
The officials spoke on condition of anonymity because they were not authorized
to speak to the media.
Hezbollah's Al-Manar TV only briefly mentioned the blast Saturday, quoting
Lebanese security officials as saying "an explosion in Haret Hreik targeted an
office belonging to Hamas, causing a number of casualties." The broadcast
offered did not elaborate, and a Hizbullah official contacted by The Associated
Press said he had no information.
Osama Hamdan, the Hamas representative in Lebanon, was not available for comment
Saturday and had no information, according to a person who answered his mobile
phone. Other Hamas officials in Beirut and neighboring Syria, which shelters the
exiled leadership of Hamas, did not answer repeated calls.
The explosion comes on the even of Ashoura, Shiite Islam's most important
religious holiday.
Explosions in the area, which is almost completely controlled by the Shiite
Hezbollah, are rare. Hizbullah has its own arsenal with tens of thousands of
rockets and missiles, which it says it needs to fight off any threat from
Israel.
The area was bombed out by Israel during the month-long 2006 war with Hizbullah.
Hizbullah leader Sheik Hassan Nasrallah is expected to address tens of thousands
of supporters commemorating the Ashoura holiday by video link on Sunday.
The explosion Saturday night occurred about 700 meters (2,300 feet) from a
complex where hundreds of Shiite Hizbullah supporters were holding a ceremony
commemorating Ashoura and listening to a live televised speech by Nasrallah.
Ashoura marks the death of Imam Hussein, the Prophet Muhammad's grandson, who
died in a battle in 680 against the leader of what became the Sunni branch of
Islam. The battle took place in the Iraqi city of Karbala.
* * * * *
Round up the usual suspects.