Suicide bomber kills 4 in Syrian town
(CBS/AP) BEIRUT - A suicide bomber blew up his car in a central Syrian town on Saturday, killing three civilians and one security officer, Syria's state news agency said.
SANA said the attacker, who camouflaged the bomb with onions, detonated the explosives in the town of Muhrada.
The anti-regime Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said the bomb targeted the local military security headquarters. Both reports said the dead included two women and a child.
The Observatory provided a photo of what it said was the bomb site. It showed the facades blown off buildings on opposite sides of a street.
Bombings of security buildings throughout Syria have grown more common as the uprising against President Bashar Assad has turned into a rebel insurgency. Many worry the attacks reflect the rise of Islamist extremists and possibly al Qaeda in the anti-Assad struggle.
Activists say more than 17,000 people, most civilians, have been killed since the uprising started with protests calling for political reform March 2011. The government says more than 4,000 security personnel have been killed. It does not provide numbers for civilians killed.
Credible claims of responsibility for such attacks are rare, although a shadowy militant group calling itself the Al-Nusra Front has claimed some of them in postings on militant websites. Little is known about the group.
The government blames them on armed gangs and terrorists it says are behind the uprising. Syria's rebels often accuse the government of orchestrating the bombings to discredit the opposition.
Neither side provides evidence.
Muhrada is 13 miles northwest of the central city of Hama and is the nearest large town to Tremseh, the village where activists says government troops killed scores of people on Thursday.
The United Nations blamed government forces for the Tremseh assault, saying U.N. observers nearby saw government troops using heavy weaponry and attack helicopters.
Activists said the army surrounded and shelled the village before storming it with pro-government gunmen who killed people in the streets. They provided videos showing tanks in the town and dozens of dead bodies.
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Late Friday, numbers of confirmed dead ranged between 74 and 150 as residents collected bodies and compiled names.
The government said the army intervened while armed terrorists were harassing the town.
On Saturday, the state news agency posted photos of rifles, hand grenades, mortars, cell phones and video cameras it said had been found in the town.
Government and activist claims could not be independently verified.
The killings in Tremseh cast new doubt over the international community's efforts to find a diplomatic solution to Syria's crisis remain relevant.
Outraged at the purported scope of the attack - possibly the single deadliest event yet in the revolt - Syrian revolutionaries took to Facebook and other social media to criticize international envoy Kofi Annan and demand his removal, reports CBS News' George Baghdadi.