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Sep 29 2008
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By Agencies   

Officials said the explosion was caused by a booby-trapped parked car [Reuters]
Officials said the explosion was caused by a booby-trapped parked car [Reuters]
At least four people have been killed and about 30 injured after a car bomb exploded in the northern Lebanese city of Tripoli.

Most of the casualties from the blast in the Bahsas region were soldiers travelling on a bus towards the capital Beirut, according to Lebanese security officials.

Officials said the explosion was caused by a parked car, packed with explosives, which was detonated by remote control as the military bus drove past.

"Once again the hand of treachery targets the military ... in a terrorist attack," the military said in a statement.

The explosion occurred during the morning rush hour with people heading to work, the officials said.
"The explosion was so big, it was deafening. Till now I can't hear properly," Khodr Kheireddine Hamad, a witness, said.

Police and the army immediately cordoned off the area as forensic experts began gathering evidence, while residents of the area rushed to the scene to look for loved ones.

Local television showed soldiers sealing off the area and preventing people from approaching the blast scene.

The blast shattered windows of several cars parked in the area.

Sectarian attacks

The attack is the second bombing to target Lebanese troops in less than two months.

On August 13, at least 18 soldiers and civilians were killed by a roadside bomb packed with nuts and bolts when it exploded near a bus carrying troops on a busy street in Tripoli.

Tripoli has been the site of a number of sectarian battles, with dozens of people killed or wounded in fighting over the summer between pro-government Sunni fighters and armed men from the Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shia Islam that is prominent in Syria.

In 2007, Lebanese troops clashed with members of the Fatah Islam group in a nearby Palestinian refugee camp. The three-month battle left hundreds of people dead before the army finally defeated the group.

"Northern Lebanon has turned into a hotbed for radical terrorists - new Salafist, new Jihadist groups," Ahmad Mousalli, a professor in political studies at the American Univeristy in Beirut, said.

"The problem was the 14th March [pro-government alliance] tried to create a militia to stand up against Hezbollah but in fact they have eased the way for these probably Sunni terrorists to infiltrate the country."

Sheikh Daie al-Islam al-Shahal, founder of the Salafi Sunni movement in northern Lebanon, rejected suggestions that Sunni fighters had carried out the attack, saying it was part of the conflict among "external forces" in Lebanon.

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