A massive blast has hit a neighbourhood of the northern Syrian city of Aleppo and caused several casualties, state television has said, blaming the rebels for the attack.
Syria TV said on Friday the explosion had been caused by a rocket fired by a “terrorist group” – a term it frequently uses to describe rebels in the 22-month-old uprising against President Bashar al-Assad.
Video broadcast on Syrian state TV showed several floors of the targeted building collapsed in a government-controlled area of the city, Syria’s largest urban centre and main commercial hub.
A man was seen carrying a baby out of the damaged building and another man was seen clutching his head as blood ran down his forehead.
It was the second time in a week that the government accused rebels of firing rockets.
But opposition groups have said Assad’s forces were behind the blast, which hit the Muhafaza Sakaniya
The state TV also reported that attacks had occurred near a mosque in southern city of Deraa, but gave no details regarding the casualty figures and the number of wounded.
The attack occurred when worshippers were leaving a mosque following Friday prayers in the southern city, the state TV said.
The attacks come amid a spike in violence in Syria and a particularly bloody week as the uprising gets worse.
On Tuesday, 87 people were killed in twin blasts at Aleppo University.
Each side blamed the other for that attack. The regime said rebels hit the university with rockets, while rebels said the deaths resulted from regime airstrikes.
Also on Friday, fighting between Syrian rebels and Assad’s loyalists flared in a Palestinian refugee camp in Damascus, killing 12 people and wounding at least 20 others, a UN refugee agency said.