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Senior Pro-Assad Sunni Imam in Syria Is Assassinated Senior Pro-Assad Sunni Imam in Syria Is Assassinated
(about 1 hour later)
BEIRUT, Lebanon — The top Sunni religious cleric in Syria, one of the major remaining Sunni supporters of President Bashar al-Assad, was killed on Thursday in what Syria state media described as a terrorist explosion at a central Damascus mosque. Anti-Assad activists said at least 20 people were killed in the blast. BEIRUT, Lebanon — A large explosion killed at least 42 people inside a central Damascus mosque on Thursday including the top Sunni religious cleric in Syria, one of the major remaining Sunni supporters of President Bashar al-Assad’s embattled government.
The cleric, Mohammad Said Ramada al-Bouti, who was believed to be in his mid-80s, was considered one of the most senior figures in Sunni Islam. His early support for the government in the Syrian civil war was considered crucial to Mr. Assad’s legitimacy because the insurgency has drawn largely from Syria’s majority Sunni population. Mr. Assad is a member of the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, and his closest advisers and loyalists are Alawites. Syria state media called the explosion a suicide bombing carried out by “mercenary terrorists against the Syrians,” and it appeared to be one of the worst attacks on worshipers since the Syrian civil war began two years ago. The main armed insurgent group, the Free Syrian Army, denied responsibility, saying it would have never targeted a mosque.
Reports on Syrian state television and the official SANA news agency gave few details of the blast at the Eman Mosque, but the television dispatch said a suicide bomber had blown himself up inside. SANA said the imam was “martyred in a terrorist explosion” in a single-line bulletin on its Web site. The official news agency, SANA, said at least 84 people were wounded in the blast at the Eman mosque and published photographs on its Web site depicting the aftermath, with large pools of congealed blood, shattered glass and splintered furniture littering the mosque’s interior.
There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the explosion. The cleric who was killed, Mohammad Said Ramada al-Bouti, 84, was one of the most senior figures in Sunni Islam and was easily the most important religious figure to die so far in the war, in which more than 70,000 people have been killed.. His early support for the government in the Syrian civil war was considered crucial to Mr. Assad’s legitimacy because the insurgency has drawn largely from Syria’s majority Sunni population. Mr. Assad is a member of the minority Alawite sect, an offshoot of Shiite Islam, and his closest advisers and loyalists are Alawites.
“He was the most important Sunni clerical supporter of the Assad regime,” said Joshua M. Landis, the director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma and author of the Syria Comment blog, which has tracked the two-year-old war in Syria. “It is a great blow to the regime and the remaining Sunni supporters of the president.” “He was the most important Sunni clerical supporter of the Assad regime,” said Joshua M. Landis, the director of the Center for Middle East Studies at the University of Oklahoma and author of the Syria Comment blog, which has tracked the Syrian conflict’s progression from a peaceful political uprising to a sectarian-tinged civil war. “It is a great blow to the regime and the remaining Sunni supporters of the president.”
Mr. Landis said the imam had been reviled by some Syrian revolutionaries when he came out early in the conflict to denounce the uprising. He was known for having a prodigious memory, was the author of at least 35 books and was ranked 23rd in a list of the most influential 500 Muslims of the world. Mr. Landis said the imam had been reviled by some Syrian revolutionaries when he came out early in the conflict to denounce the uprising. He was known for having a prodigious memory, was the author of at least 40 books and was ranked 23rd on a list of the most influential 500 Muslims in the world.
The imam was easily the most important religious figure to die so far in the Syrian civil war, in which more than 70,000 people have been killed. There was no immediate claim of responsibility for the explosion. But the SANA report blamed armed insurgents. “This massacre adds to the crimes perpetrated by the mercenary terrorists against Syrians,” the agency quoted Mr. Assad’s Baath Socialist Party leadership as saying in a statement. “They target everything including the mosques and houses of worship.”
The agency quoted the Ministry of Religious Endowments as saying the imam had been “martyred while giving a religious lesson” in the mosque. “The malicious hands of traitors killed the great Scholar because he was the voice of Syria, the right of Syria and the image of Syria,” it quoted the ministry as saying.
Some Syrian fighters and anti-Assad activists reached by telephone said they would not be surprised if the government were responsible for the mosque explosion. “I expect the regime to be involved in this assassination,” said Abu Tamam, a member of an insurgent group called the Jundilla Battalion."He is just a religious figure and not a state figure. He used to have influence, but today he’s an extra burden on the regime.”
But others expressed strong doubts that Mr. Assad’s operatives would have killed the imam or bomb a mosque in the heart of Damascus. “The regime will never get rid of such an important figure,” said an antigovernment activist in Turkey. “He’s like the spiritual father to Bashar.”

Hania Mourtada reported from Beirut, and Rick Gladstone from New York. Anne Barnard and Hwaida Saad contributed reporting from Beirut.

Hania Mourtada reported from Beirut, and Rick Gladstone from New York. Anne Barnard and Hwaida Saad contributed reporting from Beirut.