A mortar attack on a historic souk in central Damascus on Monday killed one person and wounded dozens, Syria's official news agency said.
"Terrorists launched two mortar rounds on Tarek Ben Ziyad Street, in the Al-Hariqa market of Damascus, which killed one person, wounded 30 others," SANA reported, citing a high-ranking police source.
Situated within the walls of the Old City, the souk is one of the oldest and most famous marketplaces in the capital, popular among tourists and locals alike.
Syria's civil war began to encroach on the capital in the summer of 2012, the year after it broke out.
Since then, Damascenes have been living under almost daily mortar shelling that has seen dozens of people killed, many more wounded and left a trail of destruction.
Rebel groups typically fire on Damascus from their bases on the outskirts of the city.
In a report published last week, Human Rights Watch criticised armed opposition groups in Syria for conducting indiscriminate attacks on civilian areas, which are considered war crimes.
The New York-based group documented dozens of opposition attacks on regime-controlled areas, including shelling of Damascus neighbourhoods that cost civilian lives.
In another reported attack at a civilian site Monday, a medic from Hamas was killed in the Yarmuk refugee camp south of Damascus, the Palestinian Islamist movement said.
The movement said in a statement that it "mourns the death of the jihadist brother, the martyr, Yehya Hurani, a leader in the Hamas movement". Hurani was killed in "a cowardly assassination... while on his way to perform his humanitarian duty at the Palestine Clinic in the Yarmuk camp." A Palestinian source at the camp, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said he had died of gunshot wounds and accused the Al-Nusra Front, al Qaeda's Syrian affiliate, of assassinating him.
Others blamed the rebel Free Syrian Army. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group also reported the killing. It said Hurani worked in the medical field and did not take up arms in the country's conflict.
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