Blasts erupt near Syrian Justice Ministry


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  • NEW: The Damascus blast injured at least three people
  • NEW: At least 50 people are killed in violence Thursday, the opposition says
  • U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton will attend a meeting on Syria, an official says
  • Clinton agreed to the meeting after talking with a special envoy, the official says
A day after attackers bombed a pro-government TV station, massive explosions shook the heart of Damascus near the Justice Ministry, the state-run media said.
Two blasts occurred in a parking garage Thursday outside the Palace of Justice, which houses the ministry, Syrian state TV said. The Local Coordination Committees of Syria confirmed the blast and said it occurred in the Marja neighborhood of central Damascus.
At least three people were injured and 20 cars were damaged, state TV said.
TV video showed heavy smoke rising above buildings in Damascus. Firefighters battled a blaze at the site of the explosion.
On Wednesday, bombers killed at least seven people in the headquarters of al-Ikhbaria, near Damascus, killing three journalists and four security guards, the state-run Syrian Arab News Agency reported. The attackers also ransacked and destroyed studios, the news outlet said.
There have been a flurry of attacks in Syria's major cities of Damascus and Aleppo in recent months, strikes that President Bashar al-Assad's regime has blamed on terrorists. Opposition groups have said the government itself has been behind such attacks to discredit the anti-regime forces.
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In other provinces on Thursday, at least 50 people were killed, the LCC said. They include 22 in the Damascus suburbs and 11 people in Deir Ezzor.
After more than 15 months, unrest in the Arab nation shows no sign of abating. Internationally, tension rose last week after Syria shot down a Turkish jet, an act deplored by NATO and many Western nations.
World diplomats have been working to end the intensifying violence and restore peace.
An emergency meeting has been set for Saturday in Geneva, Switzerland, to deal with the crisis. Kofi Annan, the United Nations' and Arab League's special envoy for Syria, is gathering world diplomats with the goal of agreeing on a plan to end the violence in Syria that has left thousands dead.
The meeting will bring together top diplomats of the five permanent members of the U.N. Security Council -- China, France, Russia, the United Kingdom and the United States -- and Turkey. Envoys from the United Nations, European Union, and Arab League also were invited.
The meeting of the group, dubbed The Action Group for Syria, comes at a critical time for the country, which has been mired in an uprising since March 2011 that has pitted al-Assad's forces against rebels calling for his ouster.
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A peace plan hammered out by Annan fell apart this month after both sides -- the Syrian government and the rebels -- accused the other of failing to abide by the terms to end the killing.
CNN can not independently confirm the reports of casualties or violence because access by international journalists to Syria has been severely restricted.
U.S. Secretary of State Hillary Clinton is among those attending the Geneva meeting.
She agreed to the meeting after speaking with Annan, who has "been working with key member states on a political transition plan," State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland told reporters Wednesday.
"The secretary spoke to him yesterday and told him that we like and accept his transition plan, and we think it can form the good basis not only for a meeting -- the kind of meeting that he's been looking for to show international unity -- but also to help the Syrian people move forward," Nuland said.
Russia has opposed the idea that other countries dictate a political transition, insisting it is a decision for the Syrians themselves. But Russian Foreign Minister Sergey Lavrov, briefing reporters in Moscow, said a transitional period is "necessary for settling the Syrian crisis and establishing stable and generally acceptable rules and norms, which will satisfy all the Syrian groups."
"The people of Syria must choose the content of the transitional period, its mechanism or mechanisms, within the national dialogue of the government and all the opposition groups," Lavrov said. "These terms were agreed to when the Kofi Annan plan was given support."
Iran has not been invited to the meeting. The United States was against Iran's presence despite Annan's and Russia's positions that Tehran must be involved in helping forge peace in Syria.
Lavrov says Iran is an "influential player in this situation" and it's a "great mistake" to exclude them.
"It has been said publicly in Washington that the U.S. is categorically against Iran's participation," Lavrov said. "This is a manifestation of a double standard. When the Americans needed to settle some issues related to the security of their troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, they initiated contacts with Iran and agreed on something without any hesitations."
As for the use of outside force, Lavrov said military intervention in Syria could result in a catastrophe, and he doubts "any member of NATO has an appetite" for repeating its military operation in Libya.
The Geneva meeting will come one day after Clinton meets with Lavrov in St. Petersburg.
While in St. Petersburg, Clinton also plans to discuss Russian arms sales to al-Assad's regime, the State Department official told reporters this week.
A shipment of refurbished Russian helicopters headed for Syria had to turn around and return to Russia after its British insurance company dropped coverage on the ship carrying helicopters.
Russia and China, permanent members of the Security Council, have major trade deals with Syria. Both countries vetoed a U.N. resolution calling for an end to the violence and a transition of power.

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