Rebels have carried out a suicide bomb attack overnight on an intelligence agency compound in a suburb of the Syrian capital, Damascus, reports say.
The al-Nusra Front, a jihadist militant group, said explosives-filled vehicles had been blown up outside the Air Force Intelligence (AFI) complex in Harasta.Residents said there were several huge blasts, followed by fierce clashes.
One activist group said dozens of people were killed and expressed fears for the fate of the agency's prisoners.
Human rights activists say hundreds of opponents of President Bashar al-Assad have been detained and tortured by Air Force Intelligence across the country since the uprising began in March 2011.
AFI is seen by some as the elite agency of Syria's intelligence empire.
Though smaller than Military Intelligence, in the past it has played a leading role in operations against Islamist opposition groups, as well as covert actions abroad, and has a reputation for brutality.
The agency is currently commanded by Maj Gen Jamil Hassan, a member of President Assad's minority Alawite sect.
Prisoners
Rami Abdul Rahman Syrian Observatory for Human Rights"The fate of hundreds of prisoners being held in the basements of the [Air Force Intelligence complex] is still unknown”
A statement issued by the al-Nusra Front said it had targeted Air Force Intelligence "because it is one of the most notorious security divisions, and a citadel of repression whose extent is known only to God".
The group, which has claimed to be behind a series of deadly bombings since January, said a vehicle packed with nine tonnes of explosives had been driven up to the AFI compound in Harasta and blown up.Twenty-five minutes later, another al-Nusra Front fighter blew up a one-tonne bomb hidden inside an ambulance, targeting survivors, it added. The fighters then fired mortars at the complex, the statement said.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a UK-based activist group, reported that several large explosions had shaken homes overnight in Harasta, as well as in the nearby suburbs of Jobar and Qabun.
The blasts were followed by violent clashes in several parts of Harasta, with government forces firing heavy weapons and mortars, it added.
The head of the SOHR, Rami Abdul Rahman, told the AFP news agency that dozens of people had been killed in the suicide attacks.
"The fate of hundreds of prisoners being held in the basements of the [security complex] is still unknown," he added.
The SOHR is one of the most prominent organisations documenting and reporting incidents and casualties in the Syrian conflict. The group says its reports are impartial, though its information cannot be verified.
A Syrian official told the Associated Press that a suicide bomber had detonated a car bomb near the AFI complex, while the pro-government TV channel, al-Ikhbariya, reported that the blast was followed by clashes.
On Monday, the BBC found evidence that weapons intended for the Saudi military have been found at a base used by Syrian rebels.
The BBC's Ian Pannell saw crates from a Ukrainian arms manufacturer - addressed to Saudi Arabia - at a rebel camp in the city of Aleppo.
Our correspondent says there is believed to be an increasing supply of weapons and ammunition being paid for by supporters of the Syrian rebels in the Gulf. Saudi officials have refused to comment.
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