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Syrian state media report that six people were killed and others injured in a blast at a Damascus café.

According to the Syrian state media, a bomb explosion at a packed?cafe central Damascus on Thursday killed six people and injured 22 others. No one has claimed responsibility.

Syrian state TV reported that an explosive device was planted in a cafe near the Palace of Justice, located in the heart of the capital.

According to Syrian state-run media, Damascus governor Maher Idlibi claimed that the explosion was caused by an improvised explosive devise crudely constructed.

Social media videos circulating on the internet showed blood and wounded people on the floor of a 'cafe that was allegedly the scene of the explosion. Could not verify the footage immediately.

The attack is a 'new security challenge for the Syrian government led by President Ahmed al-Sharaa who assumed control in late 2024 after ousting former President Bashar al-Assad. Assad's removal effectively ended over 14 years of a?civil conflict.

Since then, Damascus is home to a few?security incidents. One of these was a car-bomb that injured 18 people and killed a Syrian soldier in front of the Defence Ministry.

Security officials said that although no group has claimed responsibility for the explosion on Thursday, Islamic State is trying to exploit the security vacuum left by the ouster of Assad by reactivating sleeping cells, recruiting fighters and moving weapons, as the new government expands its control across the country.

The militant group declared earlier this year what it called a new phase in its operations against Sharaa’s government.

The?group has become weaker than it was when it ruled large areas of Syria and Iraq prior to the collapse of their self-declared Caliphate. It is still capable of launching deadly insurgency style attacks and is seen by Syrian, Iraqi, and Western officials to be one of the greatest threats to Syria's future.

Other opponents of Sharaa include Assad's officers and soldiers. Syria was rocked in?2025 by fighting between the new government and Alawite insurgents, as well as between government forces, and Druze gunmen. (Reporting and Writing by Jana Choukeir; Editing by Timothy Heritage Gareth Jones, Aideth Lewis, Timothy Heritage)

(source: Reuters)