Tuesday, June 24, 2025

Islamic terrorism

Syria: IS splinter group behind church bombing

Jon Shelton with AFP, dpa, KNA
1 hour ago

A little-known Islamist group has claimed responsibility for a Sunday bombing that killed 25 Christians and injured 63 more. It also disputes government arrest claims. 

https://p.dw.com/p/4wP1z
Numerous people, among them Greek-Orthodox priests, pray over the coffins of individuals killed in a terror attack at a Christian church in Damascus on Sunday
Christians of all denominations gathered for the funerals of those killed in Sunday's Damascus church attackImage: BAKR ALKASEM/AFP

On Tuesday, the Islamic State (IS) splinter group Saraya Ansar al-Sunna (Brigade of Sunni Supporters) claimed responsibility for the deadly Sunday bombing of a Greek Orthodox Church in the Syrian capital, Damascus.

The incident happened when a member of the group blew himself up at the doors of the Saint Elias Church in the Christian-Sunni Muslim neighborhood of al-Dweilaa during Sunday mass, killing 25 people and injuring another 63.

The group released a social media post claiming the attack was triggered by unspecified "provocations by Christians in Damascus."

In March, a dispute took place at the church when residents complained about Islamic chants being blasted from a car in front of the building.

The group is said to have been behind various sectarian threats and attacks targeting Alawites, Christians, Druze and Shiite Muslims. It is also accused of involvement in March massacres that rights groups say killed as many as 1,700 mostly Alawite civilians.

Islamists call government claims 'untrue, fabricated'

On Monday, Syria's new government claimed that IS had been behind the attack and announced that it had "dismantled" the cell responsible for it. Authorities said they seized explosives, suicide vests, mines and ammunition during raids that resulted in six arrests and two suspects being shot dead.

Syria's Interior Ministry said its investigation into the matter was ongoing and that all perpetrators would be brought to justice.

Saraya Ansar al-Sunna promptly took to the messaging app Telegram to reject the government's claim, calling it, "untrue, fabricated."

Saraya Ansar al-Sunna, which was formed after the fall of Syrian President Bashar Assad, warned, "What is coming will not give you respite… our soldiers... are fully prepared."

Sunday's attack was the first in a Christian church since the start of Syria's civil war in 2011, according to the UK-based group Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which has also been targeted by the group.


No comments: