A car bomb rocked the funeral of two government loyalists in a Damascus suburb killing 12 people yesterday as the army kept up its bombardment of rebel strongholds in the east of the capital.

Rescuers were seen loading charred bodies onto the back of a truck in the footage

The bombing hit Jaramana, a mainly Druze and Christian town on the southeastern outskirts of Damascus that the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights described as generally supportive of the government of President Bashar al-Assad.

“At around 2 p.m. a funeral procession was making its way to the cemetery, when a car parked on the side of the road exploded,” an army official told AFP.

“Another 48 people were wounded, many critically,” state television said.

The Observatory said the funeral was for two Assad supporters killed in a bombing on Monday.

The force of explosion completely demolished the facade of one building and caused heavy damage to others nearby, an AFP photographer reported. State media blamed rebel fighters for the bombing, which came amid an intensified bombardment by government troops of eastern districts of Damascus that shelter some of the Free Syrian Army’s best organised battalions.

But the opposition Syrian National Council accused Assad’s regime of staging the bombing against its own supporters in a bid to divert attention from the killings of hundreds of people during an army assault on a largely Sunni Muslim suburb of the capital last week.

“The regime wants to cover up for its massacres,” SNC spokesman George Sabra said, alluding to the discovery of more than 300 bodies in the town of Daraya that sparked an international outcry.

“It also wants to punish residents of Jaramana – who are of mixed religious backgrounds – for welcoming people who were displaced from nearby towns,” Mr Sabra told AFP by telephone

“The regime does not want anyone to welcome refugees from other cities. And it wants to turn the revolution into a bloody civil war fought along sectarian lines,” he said.

Some 80 per cent of Syrians are Sunni Muslim, while around 10 per cent belong to Assad’s Alawite community, five per cent are Christian, three per cent Druze and one per cent Ismaili.

The opposition draws much of its support from the Sunni majority, who have borne the brunt of the government’s crackdown.

Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt warned yesterday of the risks of Syria descending into bloody sectarian conflict after what he said was the inevitable fall of Assad’s regime.

“Whether it will be replaced by a secular democracy, an Islamic one or by a sectarian fragmentation remains to be seen,” Mr Bildt said. “The longer the conflict lasts, the greater the risk that we will see the latter development.”

The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights reported fierce shelling of northeastern neighbourhoods of Damascus yesterday as the army pressed its drive to push rebel fighters out of the capital. Among the districts targeted was Qaboon where rebels from the Free Syrian Army claimed to have downed a military helicopter on Monday.

The rebels opened what they described as a new front in the east Damascus at the weekend after a major offensive by the army last week against their positions southwest of the capital, including in the town of Daraya.

Outside the capital, the army hit rebel positions in second city Aleppo as well as Idlib province, in the northwest close to the border with Turkey.

A bombardment of the Idlib village of Kfar Nabal killed at least 13 civilians, two of them women, among at least 43 people killed nationwide. Activist network, the Syrian Revolution General Council, said that warplanes had taken part in the assault and released gruesome footage of dozens of residents desperately combing the rubble of apartment blocks for survivors.

Rescuers were seen loading charred bodies onto the back of a truck in the footage which could not be independently verified.

Activists say around 25,000 people have been killed since the uprising against Assad’s rule broke out in March last year, while the UN says more than 214,000 people have fled to neighbouring countries and another 2.5 million are in need inside Syria.

Underscoring the growing humanitarian crisis, it emerged that seven Syrians, two of them children, who attempted to flee the conflict by boat earlier this month, drowned off the coast of the nearby Mediterranean island of Cyprus. The office of the UN High Commissioner for Refugees said it was the “first case” of Syrian refugees trying to make the 100-kilometre sea passage.

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