At least eight people have been killed in a car bomb explosion at an army checkpoint to the south of the Syrian capital of Damascus. The Lebanon-based al-Mayadeen television channel said that the car bomb went off near the military checkpoint in the area of the Sayeda Zeinab Shrine to the south of Damascus on Monday. No group has so far claimed responsibility for the blast, but the Takfiri Daesh terrorist group has previously been blamed for similar attacks. Multiple explosions in February killed scores of people in the Sayeda Zeinab area, home to Syria's holiest Shia Muslim shrine, in one of the bloodiest attacks there. A terrorist attack there less than a month earlier claimed by Daesh Takfiris killed 70 people. Several people were also injured in the attack, which was the third of its kind to hit the Sayeda Zeinab neighborhood, where the holy shrine of the granddaughter of Prophet Mohammad (PBUH) is located. On February 21, the area was hit by multiple explosions that left at least 87 people dead. Earlier, three blasts had hit an area near the holy shrine, killing at least 50 people and injuring 100 others. Takfiri Daesh militants claimed responsibility for these two attacks.