Eighteen people have been injured after explosive devices went off in central Damascus, Syrian media says, reportedly near the hotel where French President Emmanuel Macron had been staying.
State news agency Sana said two devices had been detected by security forces, which exploded as specialised units began the process to defuse them.
One device was placed inside a parked vehicle, while the other was concealed in a bin, the agency said.
Macron has been in the capital for talks with his Syrian counterpart Ahmed al-Sharaa at the presidential palace. His officials said he was safe and did not hear the explosions.
After travelling to Syria, the French president is set to head to Turkey for the Nato summit.
Syrian media said four police officers were among the injured, and the interior ministry had launched an investigation to identify those responsible for the attack.
Videos and images posted on social media on Tuesday morning showed plumes of smoke and flames rising from a vehicle near a hotel in the Syrian capital.
One eyewitness told BBC Arabic's Middle East Daily that they had been standing in front of the ministry of tourism headquarters when the first explosion occurred.
They said that while security forces were searching for suspicious objects after the first bomb detonated, "a second explosion occurred approximately 20 metres from the site of the first blast".
"The first explosion caused material damage but no casualties. The second explosion, however, caused injuries to several members of the public security forces and the traffic police," the eyewitness told the BBC.
BBC Verify analysis located the explosions at approximately 125m from the Four Seasons hotel, on a major thoroughfare running through the capital.
As reports of the explosions came in, Syrian state television said that al-Sharaa had welcomed Macron to the presidential palace.
Writing on social media after the blasts, Macron said: "Nothing can smother the aspiration of Syrian women and men to live in a fully sovereign, safe, pluralistic, and united Syria.
"This morning I met Syria in all its diversity. I saw dignity, courage, and determination. My visit continues."

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