Dozens reported killed in northern city as food and medical supplies run short in besieged Homs after week-long assault.

Explosions have rocked Syria’s commercial capital, Aleppo, with state media reporting attacks on a military intelligence building and a security forces headquarters.

Syrian state television said two explosions had taken place on Friday morning and blamed the attack on “armed terrorist gangs.”

The broadcaster quoted the health ministry as saying that 28 people were killed and more than 200 others wounded, including soldiers and civilians.

“The number of casualties from the two car bombs in Aleppo has risen to 28 dead and 235 wounded,” the ministry said.

Mangled, bloodied bodies as well as severed limbs lay on the pavement outside the targeted buildings, as shown in live footage on Syrian television

Arif al-Hummoud, a commander of the Free Syrian Army, a name used by various armed groups, told Al Jazeera that opposition fighters had carried out an attack but were not responsible for the bombings.

“A group from the Free Syrian Army attacked a branch of the military security and a security unit in Aleppo with only RPGs and light weapons,” he said.

‘Heavily guarded’

Abdul Rahman Abu Hothyfa, a spokesman for the opposition Syrian Revolution Co-ordinators Union, told Al Jazeera that it was “absolutely the regime” that carried out the attack.

He said the security buildings were heavily guarded by security forces and that it would be “impossible” to launch attacks such as Friday’s blasts.

The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said 30 people had been killed in explosions in the neighbourhoods of Sakhur and Marjeh and the Dawar el-Basel roundabout.

Three deadly bombings aimed at security targets occurred in the capital, Damascus, in December and January. The government blamed al-Qaeda, while the opposition accused the authorities of carrying out the attacks.

Friday’s bombings were the first significant violence in Aleppo, a city of about two million people that is home to a prosperous business community which has stayed largely loyal to the government.

The city has seen only occasional protests. Still, hours after the explosions, hundreds of protesters marched in several Aleppo neighbourhoods after Friday prayers.

Security forces opened fire on protesters, killing at least six people, according to the Local Co-ordination Committees. The activist network said 12 people were killed in the province and at least 23 more in other parts of the country.

Demonstrations were held in cities across Syria on what activists called, “Russia is killing our children” Friday, in response to Russia and China vetoing a UN Security Council resolution last week.

Homs ‘besieged’

In the flashpoint city of Homs, activists reported that tanks were massing outside opposition neighbourhoods, a week after government forces started continuously shelling the city. Troops were reportedly also entering the neighbourhood if Inshaat, detaining several residents.

Al Jazeera’s Rula Amin, reporting from neighbouring Lebanon, said activists feared a major assault.

“The army seems determined to conquer the opposition neighbourhoods – the Free Syrian Army and some other armed opposition groups have been in control of those streets for some weeks now,” she said.

“There are no medical supplies and people are dying in the field hospitals.“ – Salam al-Homsi, activist



Amin said that while shelling stopped on Friday morning, the areas were “besieged by the army and people are calling for blood and bread”.

“Very little food is left and little medical aid is being provided to them”.

An activist in Homs giving her name as Salam al-Homsi said it was getting more difficult to save those injured.

“We can’t even get them out of the rubble because the snipers won’t let people help the wounded,” she said. “There are no medical supplies and people are dying in the field hospitals. It’s getting worse and worse.”

Human Rights Watch said in a report on Thursday that makeshift hospitals in besieged opposition areas were overflowing with dead and wounded from government bombardments and snipers.

The US-based rights watchdog said more than 300 people had been killed since the offensive against opposition neighbourhoods was launched last Friday.

In the latest example of how the cricis in Syria is affecting neighbouring Lebanon, at least one person was reportedly wounded in gunfire and grenade blasts in the Lebanese city of Tripoli, where Sunni Muslim and Alawite communities are divided over the Syrian issue.

Armed men have deployed heavily in two rival neighbourhoods, one group supporting and the other opposed to President Bashar al-Assad’s leadership in Syria.