DAMASCUS, May 19: A car bomb blew up at a Syrian military post in the eastern city of Deir al-Zor on Saturday, killing nine people, an attack that Syria alleged was the latest proof that an uprising against President Bashar al-Assad was a foreign plot.

The official SANA news agency said the blast had been the work of a suicide bomber, and had killed nine and wounded about 100, including guards, at what it called military installations. It said residences had been damaged.

State television broadcast footage of smoke rising over the city, pools of blood amid rubble, the damaged facades of buildings, and twisted and smoking vehicles.

Opposition activists said the target was an intelligence base.

“It seems like a well-planned attack. The explosion hit the least guarded rear gate of the Military Intelligence complex… where the operatives keep their cars,” said one activist in Deir al-Zor.

State television called the blast part of a campaign funded by Saudi Arabia and Qatar to topple Assad.

The Gulf powers have called for military assistance for the ‘Free Syrian Army’, a loosely organised force of defecting soldiers and protesters formed in response to Assad’s crackdown on what began 14 months ago as a peaceful uprising.

Syrian television said the UN staff who were supposed to be monitoring an internationally brokered ceasefire, which has yet to take hold, had inspected the site.

The UN/Arab League peace plan drawn up by Kofi Annan aims to mark a political path out of the violence in Syria.

UN peacekeeping chief Herve Ladsous, in Damascus for consultations with ceasefire observers, told reporters on Saturday: “This is a process.

We have reached certain elements of our objectives. We are not there yet...”

Suicide attacks

Twin suicide bombings on security facilities in Damascus killed at least 55 people this month, the deadliest in a series of such attacks in the capital.

On Thursday Syria sent a letter to the United Nations saying members of Al Qaeda and the Muslim Brotherhood were using border areas of neighbouring Lebanon — where Syria has long influenced the security apparatus — to arm Syrian opposition groups.

It pointed the finger at a political movement led by Saad al-Hariri, son of assassinated former minister Rafik al-Hariri, and at Lebanese Salafist groups.

Last week Sunnis in the Lebanese city of Tripoli fought street battles against Alawites.

Earlier this month, Syria sent the United Nations the names of 26 foreigners who it said were affiliated with Al Qaeda and who had been caught trying to enter the country from Turkey to fight.

On Saturday state television said security forces had thwarted two more such infiltration attempts, one in Idlib province, which borders Turkey, and one from Lebanon.

A British-based opposition group, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, said security forces had shot and killed a man in Khan Sheikhoun in Idlib, and that unidentified gunmen had killed two people in the northern city of Aleppo. There was no independent verification of the claims from Syria, which allows little or no access to foreign journalists.

Members of Syria’s main opposition grouping, the Syrian National Congress, have accused Assad of orchestrating the bomb attacks in order to discredit them and flesh out his account of a foreign conspiracy.—Reuters