About 24 people are dead and 60 wounded following four bomb blasts in Casablanca late Friday, said the country's Interior Minister, Mostafa Sahel.

He said, a dozen suicide bombers were among the dead.

"International terrorism has struck Casablanca tonight," Sahel said in a statement carried by the official Moroccan news agency MAP.




Moroccan security officials said the bombs went off near a Spanish restaurant, a Jewish community centre and the Belgian consulate, killing two policemen outside.

Three of the explosions were from car bombs and the fourth appeared to be detonated by a suicide bomber wearing an explosive belt, security officials said.

No one has claimed responsibility for these attacks, which appeared to have occurred simultaneously just after 9 p.m. local time, officials said.

On Thursday and Friday, the U.S. warned its citizens not to travel to parts of Africa, in fear that they might be targets of such attacks.

On Monday, suicide blasts in the Saudi capital, Riyadh, killed 34 people at three foreigners' housing compounds

Three Saudis were arrested in Casablanca last year for leading an al-Qaeda plot to attack U.S. and British warships.