Suicide bomb attacks in Syrian capital
(CNN) -- Two suicide car bombs carrying "the blueprints of al Qaeda" exploded Friday outside the offices of two security branches in the Syrian capital of Damascus, state-run media reported. The attacks follow the arrival of an Arab League advance team in the country to discuss the parameters of a pending mission to monitor the violence that has beset Syria in the wake of an uprising against President Bashar al-Assad that has killed thousands. State TV said the Arab League team visited the "bomb blast sites and witnessed their horrific impact." The bombers targeted the State Security Directorate and another security branch, according to media reports. A number of military and civilian casualties were reported, the media reports said. Neither state-run TV nor the state-run news agency provided details about the possible number of dead or wounded. "Preliminary investigations indicate that the criminal attack <a href="http://www.louisvuittonukhandbagsuk.com"><strong>Louis Vuitton</strong></a> carries the blueprints of al Qaeda," the state-run Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) reported. The two attacks, according the investigations, were carried out by two suicide bombers with two booby-trapped cars, SANA reported. CNN can not independently verify the reports. The Syrian government has refused access to international journalists. Grisly images of body parts strewn across a street near at least one of the explosions were broadcast on state TV. The bombs charred cars and destroyed buildings, according to video from the scene. It also showed men carrying the wounded in blankets. The violence is the latest to hit Syria, which has been mired in a bloody months-long uprising that began with government crackdown on protesters calling for the end of the al-Assad's regime. The escalation in violence by al-Assad's security forces against the opposition has earned worldwide condemnation, most notably from the Arab League but also from the United States, Turkey as well as countries in Europe. The Arab League team that arrived in Damascus on Thursday is coordinating logistics for a planned mission to monitor the opposition and Syrian forces. Al-Assad agreed this week to allow Arab League observers into the country to monitor what opposition groups say is a deadly crackdown on demonstrators. He has insisted security forces are cracking down on armed terrorist gangs. The observer mission is part of an Arab League initiative that calls for withdrawing the Syrian army and militias from towns, releasing detainees and ending all forms of violence. Syria and the Arab League signed an agreement Monday to allow the observer mission to enter the country. A source inside the Arab League told CNN that the team will <a href="http://www.louisvuittonukhandbagsuk.com"><strong>Louis Vuitton UK</strong></a> meet with Syrian officials and prepare for the observers to travel to Syria by Monday or Tuesday. A meeting is scheduled Monday in Cairo where the Arab League is headquartered, with members of the observer mission to discuss details of the operation, said Ibrahim Zafarani of the Arab Doctors Association. Zafarani said he and two Qatari doctors will be traveling to Syria. "Our mission will be to assess the hospitals and their capabilities to take on patients, document the type of injuries, evaluate hospital staff and the medical assistance and supplies required for the hospitals, especially in the hotspot areas," he said. The suicide bombings in Damascus come amid a surge of violence this week that claimed hundreds of lives, the opposition Syrian National Council said. At least 38 people were killed Thursday, according the the Local Coordination Committees of Syria, an opposition network that says it collects reports from eyewitnesses and protesters. CNN can not confirm the reports. Of those killed, at least 25 were in the beleaguered western city of Homs. Earlier this week, around 250 people were killed in a 48-hour stretch, most <a href="http://www.louisvuittonoutletukshop.co.uk"><strong>Louis Vuitton UK</strong></a> specifically in Homs and in Idlib province in northwestern Syria, according to the opposition Syrian National Council. It said the government has committed "acts of genocide." Well over 5,000 people have died so far in al-Assad's crackdown on protests that began in March, the United Nations said earlier this month. But scores of deaths have been reported by activists since that figure was released. One global activist group, Avaaz, said on Friday that more than 6,000 people have been killed in the government crackdown, now in its 10th month. The government said 2,000 of its soldiers and security forces have been killed in the crisis, SANA has said. CNN's Salma Abdelaziz contributed to this report.
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