Bomb kills 9 in Damascus cafe metres from Syria's Palace of Justice
An IED planted under a table in a lawyers' cafe on al-Nasr Street killed at least 9 and wounded 22 on July 2; no group has claimed responsibility but the attack came hours after Syria's first post-Assad parliament began to take shape
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Summary
An improvised explosive device placed under a table inside a lawyers' cafe on al-Nasr Street in central Damascus killed at least 9 people and wounded 22 on July 2, 2026. The cafe sits roughly 100 metres from the Palace of Justice, where Syria's new government is prosecuting former Assad-era officials. A person entered, planted the device and walked out before the blast, according to Syrian security sources. No group claimed responsibility. Damascus Governor Maher Marwan blamed "bad actors" seeking to destabilise the country. The attack came one day after Syria's first post-Assad parliament began taking shape after nearly 15 years of conflict.
The split
Al Jazeera and regional Arabic media focused on the courthouse proximity and read the attack as an attempt to sabotage Syria's transitional justice process. Western outlets led with the death toll and the new government's loss of credibility in securing the capital. Syria's new authorities, which emerged from Hayat Tahrir al-Sham's December 2024 takeover, have faced persistent armed resistance; the Palace of Justice angle was largely absent from early English-language wires, which framed it as a general security failure rather than a targeted strike on accountability proceedings.
By the numbers
- 9, killed in the blast.
- 22, wounded, many of them lawyers, courthouse staff and visitors.
- 100 metres, distance from the Palace of Justice entrance.
- 1 day, since Syria's first post-Assad parliament session began to take shape.
- December 2024, when Syria's new government took power after Assad fled.
Why it matters
Syria's new government cannot consolidate political legitimacy if it cannot secure central Damascus. The Palace of Justice is the physical site of Syria's accountability process for Assad-era crimes; an attack in its shadow sends a message to judges, lawyers, witnesses and defendants. The timing alongside parliament's formation suggests organised resistance to the transition, not a random strike.
What to watch
- Whether any group claims responsibility and what that reveals about the actor network targeting Syria's new institutions.
- The Syrian government's security response: arrests, area lockdowns, or changes to courthouse access.
- Whether the attack delays any scheduled trials of former Assad officials.
- International donor and mediator reactions to the security breach in Damascus.