51 people have been killed in explosions in Syria
It comes a day after President Bashar al-Assad declared he would seek re-election in June.
Government forces have pushed back the mainly Sunni Muslim rebels
seeking to topple President Assad from many of their strongholds around
Damascus.
However, residents say the insurgents have stepped up
rocket and mortar attacks against the heart of the capital in recent
weeks.
Forces loyal to President Assad, whose Alawite sect is an offshoot of Shi'ite Islam, are also in control of most of Homs.
The attacks targeted Alawite and Shi'ite areas of the two cities.
In Homs, at least 37 people including children were killed by twin
car bombs near a busy roundabout in the Alawite neighbourhood of Zahraa.
A local security source put the death toll at 42.
In central Damascus, two mortar shells struck an education complex in
the mainly Shi'ite Muslim district of Shaghour, killing at least 14
people and wounding dozens.
The state news agency SANA described the Badr el-Din Hussaini complex as a religious Jurisprudence college.
However, residents said there were also primary and secondary school students there.
SANA said 14 people had been killed and 86 wounded but the
British-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the
violence in Syria, put the death toll at 17.
Culled from
rte.ie
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