
The Daesh extremist group has claimed responsibility for a series of attacks across Syria that left dozens of people dead, in an announcement on its radio station.
In the message broadcast Saturday on Al-Bayan radio, Daesh said it was behind explosions targeting Kurdish new year festivities in northeast Syria and raids on government positions in the central province of Hama.
Forty-five people, including at least 12 children, were killed in twin bombings in the northeastern city of Hasakeh on Friday as they marked their new year's eve, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
Observatory head Rami Abdel Rahman said people were too scared to celebrate on Saturday, fearing more attacks.
The Daesh radio station said the group detonated a car and a bike rigged with explosives in Hasakeh city, which is controlled by Kurdish fighters and Syrian regime forces.
The attacks, which took place on the bloodiest day in Syria so far this year, were widely condemned.
"Committing these barbaric crimes on this day, which amounts to a national holiday in Syria, shows that the killers have no link to the Syrian people or to their values. In fact, they lie in wait for Syrians," said the Syrian National Council, the largest bloc in the opposition National Coalition.
"This description applies to the regime of (President Bashar) al-Assad and to the extremist terrorist organisations it has produced," it said.
Syria's foreign ministry sent letters to UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon and the president of the UN Security Council calling for "steps to deter terrorist organisations and their funders".
IS declared a "caliphate" in June 2014 that straddles large parts of Iraq and Syria under its control.
In its radio statement, the Sunni Muslim extremist group also claimed responsibility for a "special operation" Friday on a government supply route linking the provinces of Hama and Aleppo to the north.
"The soldiers of the caliphate stormed regime checkpoints," Al-Bayan said, killing more than 100 regime soldiers and 15 fighters from the Lebanese militia group Hezbollah, which has intervened in Syria on behalf of the government.
The Britain-based Observatory put the Hama death toll at 63, but said other Daesh attacks in the province of Homs had left 20 regime forces dead.
Syria's conflict began in March 2011 with peaceful demonstrations but has since evolved into a bloody civil war increasingly dominated by the presence of jihadist groups.
Source: AFP
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