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The bomb was locally made, packed in a bag with nuts and bolts to maximize casualties, and was detonated by remote control, security officials said. Electrician Hatem Hussein, 24, said he ran to the scene after hearing the loud explosion. "The wounded were lying on the ground, men in military uniforms," he said. Another witness, Khaled Bizri, 38, said he didn't have the "courage to look at the dead," who included a popular bread vendor well known among residents, named Abu Ayman. "Everybody knew him. This was his place for 30 years." Tripoli, about 50 miles north of Beirut on the Mediterranean coast, is Lebanon's second-largest city and has a mostly Sunni Muslim population dominated by groups loyal to the Western-backed parliamentary majority. Despite a relative calm elsewhere, it has in the past weeks witnessed sectarian clashes between Sunni fighters and followers of the Alawite sect, an offshoot Shiite sect, that killed and wounded dozens of people.
Former Prime Minister Omar Karami -- a prominent politician from Tripoli
-- said it is too early to know the motive, but said the attack could be linked to the 2007 Nahr el-Bared violence, given the high casualties among soldiers. Fatah Islam claimed responsibility for a May 31 bomb blast that killed a soldier in Abdeh, near Tripoli. Lebanon has seen a series of explosions in the last 3 1/2 years, including a 2005 truck bombing that killed former Prime Minister Rafik Hariri in Beirut, an explosion that sparked the political and security upheaval in the country. But there have been no serious attacks against politicians or public places since February.
[Associated
Press;
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