Nine killed in Damascus cafe bombing including six lawyers, officials vow justice
A bomb exploded at a cafe near Damascus’s Palace of Justice on Thursday, killing nine people including six lawyers and wounding 22, Syrian authorities report; no group has claimed responsibility.
What happened
Al Jazeera Syria reports that a bomb exploded on Thursday inside the Al-Mushairiya Cafe near the Palace of Justice in Damascus, killing nine people including six lawyers and wounding 22. The cafe was a known gathering place for legal professionals and court visitors.
Outside Brief is treating this as a source-led account. Any disputed responsibility, casualty figure, battlefield claim or single-source assertion should be treated as unconfirmed/hearsay unless confirmed by another reliable source or a named official. The Syrian Bar Association publicly mourned the six lawyers killed, naming them and calling them "martyrs" performing their mission in the justice system. Local media identified the deceased lawyers, offering personal details such as family ties and work circumstances, underlining the human toll.
Syrian authorities described the explosive device as primitive and confirmed it was planted inside the cafe before detonation, rejecting social media speculation about a suicide bomber. Officials promised to find those behind the attack but have not released further updates, and no group has claimed responsibility.
Known from the source
- A bomb exploded inside Al-Mushairiya Cafe in Damascus near the Palace of Justice on Thursday.
- Nine people were killed and 22 wounded in the explosion.
- Six of the dead were lawyers, named by local media and mourned by the Syrian Bar Association.
- The device was described as primitive and planted inside the cafe.
- No group has claimed responsibility for the bombing.
What remains unclear
The bombing has drawn condemnation from regional governments including Turkiye, Iraq, Egypt, Qatar, and Jordan, as well as the European Union, all of which have rejected terrorism and expressed solidarity with Syria. This event represents a serious security breach in Damascus since the government transition in December 2024.
What remains unclear: Confirm whether the central claim is corroborated; until then treat it as unconfirmed/hearsay. Confirm the number and identities of the killed and wounded as per independent verification. Verify the investigative status and official statements from Syrian authorities. Check for any claims of responsibility by armed groups post-publication.
Evidence note
This story contains report-led claims. The article keeps those claims attributed and treats them as unconfirmed/hearsay unless independently corroborated.
Original source: Al Jazeera Syria. Open the source.
Outside Brief note: this story keeps the main source visible and separates what is reported from what remains unclear.