Footage
of chemical attack in Syria is fraud
There is proof the footage of the alleged chemical attack in Syria was fabricated, Mother Agnes Mariam el-Salib, mother superior of St. James Monastery in Qara, Syria, told RT. She says she is about to submit her findings to the UN.
RT,
6
September, 2013
Mother
Agnes, a Catholic nun, who has been living in Syria for 20 years and
has been reporting actively on what has been going on in the
war-ravaged country, says she carefully studied the video featuring
allegedly victims of the chemical weapons attack in the Syrian
village of Guta in August and now questions its authenticity.
An
image grab taken from a video uploaded on YouTube by the Arbeen
unified press office on August 21, 2013 shows a man comforting a
Syrian girl in shock as she screams in Arabic "I am alive"
following an attack in which Syrian opposition claim the regime used
chemical weapons in eastern Ghouta, on the outskirts of Damascus (AFP
Photo)
In
her interview with RT, Mother Agnes doubts so much footage could have
been taken in so little time, and asks where parents of the
supposedly dead children are. She promises to send her report to the
UN.
The
nun is indignant with the world media for apparently turning a blind
eye to the Latakia massacre by rebel extremists, which left 500
civilians including women and children dead.
Russia’s
Foreign Ministry has called on the international community to pay
attention to revelations made by Mother Agnes Mariam el-Salib.
RT: The
United States has used internet photos and video footage of the
supposed chemical weapons attack in Eastern Guta to build a case
against the Syrian government. Have you been able to look at these
files? What do you have to say about them?
Mother Agnes Mariam el-Salib
Mother
Agnes: I have carefully studied the footage, and I will
present a written analysis on it a bit later. I maintain that the
whole affair was a frame-up. It had been staged and prepared in
advance with the goal of framing the Syrian government as the
perpetrator.
The
key evidence is that Reuters made these files public at 6.05 in the
morning. The chemical attack is said to have been launched between 3
and 5 o’clock in the morning in Guta. How is it even possible to
collect a dozen different pieces of footage, get more than 200 kids
and 300 young people together in one place, give them first aid and
interview them on camera, and all that in less than three hours? Is
that realistic at all? As someone who works in the news industry, you
know how long all of it would take.
The
bodies of children and teenagers we see in that footage – who were
they? What happened to them? Were they killed for real? And how could
that happen ahead of the gas attack? Or, if they were not killed,
where did they come from? Where are their parents? How come we don’t
see any female bodies among all those supposedly dead children?
I
am not saying that no chemical agent was used in the area – it
certainly was. But I insist that the footage that is now being
peddled as evidence had been fabricated in advance. I have studied it
meticulously, and I will submit my report to the UN Human Rights
Commission based in Geneva.
RT: Recently
you’ve visited Latakia and the adjacent areas, you’ve talked to
the eyewitnesses to the massacre of civilians carried out in Latakia
by Jabhat al-Nusra. What can you tell us about it?
MA: What
I want to ask first of all is how the international community can
ignore the brutal killing spree in Latakia on Laylat al-Qadr early in
the morning of August 5, an attack that affected more than 500
people, including children, women and the elderly. They were all
slaughtered. The atrocities committed exceed any scale. But there was
close to nothing about it in the international mass media. There was
only one small article in “The Independent”, I believe.
We
sent our delegation to these villages, and our people had a look at
the situation on-site, talked to the locals, and most importantly –
talked to the survivors of the massacre.
I
don’t understand why the Western media apply double standards in
this case – they talk about mass murder that the use of chemical
weapons resulted in non-stop, but they keep quiet about the Latakia
massacre.
RT: Do
you know anything about the fate of hostages captured in Latakia?
A handout picture released by the
Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) on August 20, 2013 shows soldiers
loyal to the regime forces wrapping a decomposed body that was
allegedly discovered in a mass grave in northern Latakia, a province
on the Mediterranean coast (AFP Photo)
MA: In
the village of Estreba they massacred all the residents and burnt
down their houses. In the village of al-Khratta almost all the 37
locals were killed. Only ten people were able to escape.
A
total of twelve Alawite villages were subjected to this horrendous
attack. That was a true slaughterhouse. People were mutilated and
beheaded. There is even a video that shows a girl being dismembered
alive – alive! – by a frame saw. The final death toll exceeded
400, with 150 to 200 people taken hostage. Later some of the hostages
were killed, their deaths filmed.
At
the moment we are looking for the hostages and negotiating their
release with the militants, but so far we haven’t managed to
achieve that.
RT: We
often hear reports of Christians being persecuted by the militants.
Just the day before yesterday there was an attack in the village of
Maaloula, where the majority of population is Christian. Are
Christians in Syria facing grave danger?
MA: Everyone
in Syria is facing grave danger. There was a case of Muslim religious
leaders being kidnapped and beheaded. They were humiliated and
tortured. Ismailis, the druze, Christians – people from all parts
of Syrian society – are being mass murdered. I would like to say
that if these butchers didn’t have international support, no one
would have dared to cross the line. But today, unfortunately, the
violation of human rights and genocide in Syria is covered up on the
international level. I demand the international community stops
assessing the situation in Syria in accordance with the interests of
a certain group of great powers. The Syrian people are being killed.
They fall victim to contractors, who are provided with weapons and
sent to Syria to kill as many people as possible. The truth is,
everywhere in Syria people are being kidnapped, tortured, raped and
robbed. These crimes remain unpunished, because the key powers chose
international terrorism as a way to destroy sovereign states. They’ve
done it to other countries. And they will just keep doing it if the
international community doesn’t say “Enough!”
RT: You’ve
managed to get hold of some sensitive information. Does this make you
fear for your life as someone who keeps documents that may compromise
the militants? Has anyone threatened you?
MA: You
are right. I do get threatened. They are trying to discredit me. I
know there is a book coming out soon in France that labels me as a
criminal who kills people. But any believer should first and foremost
trust their conscience, their belief in God, and that will help them
save innocent lives. I don’t care much about my own life. My life
is no more precious than that of any Syrian child, whose body could
be used as evidence to justify wrongdoing. This is the biggest crime
ever perpetrated in history.
RT: What
should the Syrians do to stop the tragedy they are going through?
AFP Photo
MA: The
Syrians themselves can do nothing to stop it. They can only rely on
the international community, friendly nations, world powers, such as
Russia, China, and India. With a lot of enthusiasm we did welcome the
news that the British parliament voted against the participation of
their country in the possible war against Syria. There is a terrorist
war going on against Syria right now. The international community and
Syria’s friends should join forces and say: Enough! And they need
to use every opportunity to do that. Otherwise this threat Syria is
facing now will turn into a threat to universal peace.
RT: What
should the Vatican and other hubs of Christianity do to put an end to
this tragedy?
MA: The
Pope says he has no planes, no bombs, and no armed forces. Instead,
he has the power of the truth, and the truth he has told. There are
messages coming from everywhere in the world urging against a
military intervention in Syria. Those who want to hear them will. The
Pope, the patriarchs, Nobel Prize winners, including women, keep
saying the same in unison: Let’s stop fighting. No conflict can be
solved by military means. Stop adding fuel to the flame!
All the prominent public figures in the world have risen to speak against the war. Everyone has spoken their mind, but the US prefers to turn a deaf ear. The world public opinion has turned against the US. It’s the first time in history that America is alone. They are claiming that they are backed by ten countries. But I insist they aren’t, because the people of these countries disagree with their governments. Even the American people disagree with their government.
All the prominent public figures in the world have risen to speak against the war. Everyone has spoken their mind, but the US prefers to turn a deaf ear. The world public opinion has turned against the US. It’s the first time in history that America is alone. They are claiming that they are backed by ten countries. But I insist they aren’t, because the people of these countries disagree with their governments. Even the American people disagree with their government.
RT: Do
you believe that this tragedy will end and Syria will remain a
homeland for all Syrians, regardless of their ethnical or religious
identity?
MA: I’m
not Syrian myself, but I’ve been living in Syria for 20 years. I’d
like to remind everyone that Damascus is the most ancient capital in
the world. I would like to remind everyone that Syria is the cradle
of civilization. I would like to remind everyone that this is the
holy land that gave birth to the main world religions. What is
happening in Syria should serve as a lesson for everyone. I mean that
in existential rather than political sense. I am convinced that with
God’s help the Syrian people will be able to remain strong, heal
their wounds, reconcile and chase out all the foreign mercenaries and
terrorists. I believe there will be peace in Syria. But for that we
need help from the international community.
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