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Syrian mourners pray Saturday at the coffins of 11 police officers who were killed in a bombing in the Midan neighborhood of Damascus on Friday, during a mass funeral at Al-Hassan mosque in the capital city. The blast killed 26 people.
Syrian mourners pray Saturday at the coffins of 11 police officers who were killed in a bombing in the Midan neighborhood of Damascus on Friday, during a mass funeral at Al-Hassan mosque in the capital city. The blast killed 26 people.
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BEIRUT — Thousands of government supporters turned out Saturday for the funeral service for victims of a bombing in Damascus, the Syrian capital, waving flags and holding up pictures of President Bashar Assad, state media reported.

Syria’s Interior Ministry has vowed to strike back with an “iron fist” after what it described as a suicide bombing in Midan, one of the few neighborhoods in central Damascus where major anti-government demonstrations have taken place. Authorities said 26 people were killed, including 15 who have not been identified, and 63 were wounded in Friday’s attack.

Crowds lined the streets in Damascus as a procession of ambulances, with lights flashing, transported the flag-draped coffins to Al-Hassan mosque for funeral prayers, according to video broadcast on state television. “The people want Bashar al-Assad,” they chanted.

Syrian officials say the bombings are proof that they are up against armed terrorists. Opposition activists have accused the government of staging the bombings to tarnish the image of a mostly peaceful uprising.

Information Minister Adnan Mahmoud told reporters inside the mosque that the explosion “is part of the scheme based on terrorism and killing that has been targeting Syria since nine months.”

The minister of religious affairs, Abdul-Sattar al-Sayyed, said these “criminal groups that carried out this attack would not undermine our steadfastness. We should stand in front of this conspiracy that has wracked the homeland.”

It was the second major attack in the capital in the past few weeks. Authorities said 44 people were killed and 166 wounded when two suicide car bombers targeted intelligence agencies Dec. 23.

An Arab League committee is scheduled to meet today to review the preliminary findings of an observer mission sent to Syria to monitor the government’s compliance with regional demands to end a violent crackdown on protests.

Opposition activists charge that the mission has done little but provide a cover for more bloodshed. They said as many as 35 people were killed Friday as security forces tried to bring the protests to a halt. The violence continued Saturday, with 27 more deaths reported, according to the Local Coordination Committees, a network of activists that organizes protests and documents violence.

Journalists are restricted in Syria, making it difficult to verify the claims of either side.

Arab League officials have urged all sides not to rush to judge the observer mission, which is monitoring compliance with a peace plan calling for the withdrawal of security forces from residential areas, the release of political prisoners and dialogue with the opposition.

The Associated Press contributed to this report.

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