BEIRUT — A large car bombing in Syria’s largest rebel-held city of Idlib killed at least 23 people on Sunday evening, activists reported.
The blast ignited fires, damaged buildings and overturned several cars along a wide avenue in the city, according to photos and video posted by the activist-run Thiqa News Agency and Baladi News Agencies. Ambulances and fire brigades were seen rushing to the scene.
Idlib is the capital of a province by the same name that is controlled by several rebel factions, including an al-Qaida-linked group, vying for dominance as government forces are pushing an offensive into the southeast corner of the region.
The bombing took place outside an office of an insurgent group called Ajnad al-Koukaz, according to the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights and a local media activist who declined to be named out of fear of reprisals. The faction is made up of foreign fighters, mostly from the Caucuses and Russia, said the media activist. It is in alliance with an al-Qaida-linked faction that dominates the province, according to Observatory’s chief Rami Abdurrahman.