DAMASCUS, Syria
(AP) -- Syria's state-run media say gunmen have detonated a bomb in
the country's south, hitting a bus with visiting Jordanian writers and
wounding two of them.
The SANA news agency
says Jordanian writers Issa Shattat and Jihad Obeidat were lightly
wounded in Thursday's attack in the southern province of Daraa. The bus
was returning to Jordan.
The delegation from
Jordanian Writers Syndicate was in Syria for days and met with President
Bashar Assad. SANA did not say whether the Jordanian delegation was
intentionally targeted.
Roadside bomb attacks are common in Syria's nearly three-year conflict that has killed more than 120,000 people.
THIS IS A BREAKING NEWS UPDATE. Check back soon for further information. AP's earlier story is below.
Around
500 Syrian families crossed the border into Lebanon overnight, joining
the flood of people trying to escape an offensive by President Bashar
Assad's forces in a mountainous region along the frontier, a U.N.
official said Thursday.
The new arrivals add
to the more than 13,000 people that the U.N. says have found shelter in
Lebanon since the Syrian government offensive in the rugged Qalamoun
region north of Damascus began last Friday. The influx has left aid
agencies scrambling to provide enough shelter for the refugees.
Lebanese
authorities have granted aid groups permission to build a temporary
transit camp for Syrians for the first time since the uprising began
three years ago, said Lisa Abou Khaled, an official with the U.N.
refugee agency. She said the U.N. agency put up 21 tents overnight, and
will set up an additional 29 by the end of Thursday.
"We're just doing it as an emergency response," she said. "We've always had a number of tents in stock."
Lebanon,
which has taken in an estimated 1.4 million Syrian refugees, has been
reluctant to build camps to house Syrians, fearing they will stay
permanently. Instead, local communities have taken in many refugees,
while others have been left to fend for themselves.
Abou
Khaled said that by Wednesday evening, the number of refugees who have
arrived in the Lebanese border town of Arsal since last Friday stood at
13,000. She said another 500 families, each on average numbering about
six people, arrived overnight.
Also Thursday,
the international aid agency Oxfam released a report that highlighted
the challenges Syrian refugees face in Lebanon, particularly with
mounting debts that are pushing entire families into a cycle of grinding
poverty.
The group said refugee families in
Lebanon are spending more than twice their monthly average income of
$250. It added that many families have exhausted their savings and have
resorted to borrowing money as the job market in Lebanon has dried up.
It
also said many Syrian children are not going to school because their
parents can't afford the additional expenses. Oxfam based its
conclusions on a survey of 1,500 people conducted last month.
Syrian
government troops launched their long-anticipated offensive in the
Qalamoun hills last week in a bid to cut cross-border rebel supply lines
and secure the main north-south highway that runs through the region.
On
Tuesday, Syrian forces captured the town of Qara, and activists say
their next target is likely to be the nearby larger town of Yabroud, a
major smuggling hub for rebels.
The
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights activist group
reported fighting Thursday between rebels and government troops in the
towns of Nabak and Deir Attiyeh, which are located along the highway
between Qara and Yabroud.
The Observatory said
the rebel forces were led by fighters from two al-Qaida-linked groups,
Jabhat al-Nusra and the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant.
The
Observatory and the Syrian state news agency SANA also reported that a
mortar attack on al-Haj Atef Square in the central city of Homs killed
at least three people and wounded 25 others.
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