Syria
'chemical attack' staged to provoke US airstrike, London pushed
perpetrators – Russian MoD
RT,
13 April, 2018The Russian Defense Ministry has presented what it says is proof that the reported chemical weapons attack in Syria was staged. It also accused the British government of pressuring the perpetrators to speed up the “provocation.”
During a briefing on Friday, the ministry showed interviews with two people, who, it said, are medical professionals working in the only hospital operating in Douma, a town near the Syrian capital, Damascus.
In
the interviews released to the media, the two men reported how
footage was shot of people dousing each other with water and treating
children, which was claimed to show the aftermath of the April 7
chemical weapons attack. The patients shown in the video suffered
from smoke poisoning and the water was poured on them by their
relatives after a false claim that chemical weapons were used, the
ministry said.
“Please,
notice. These people do not hide their names. These are not some
faceless claims on the social media by anonymous activists. They took
part in taking that footage,” said ministry spokesman Major-General
Igor Konashenkov.
“The
Russian Defense Ministry also has evidence that Britain had a direct
involvement in arranging this provocation in Eastern Ghouta,” the
general added, referring to the neighborhood of which Douma is part.
“We know for certain that between April 3 and April 6 the so-called
White Helmets were seriously pressured from London to speed up the
provocation that they were preparing.”
According
to Konashenkov, the group, which was a primary source of photos and
footage of the purported chemical attack, was informed of a
large-scale artillery attack on Damascus planned by the Islamist
group Army of Islam, which controlled Douma at the time. The White
Helmets were ordered to arrange the provocation after retaliatory
strikes by the Syrian government forces, which the shelling was
certain to lead to, he said.
The
UK rejected the accusations, with British UN Ambassador Karen Pierce
calling them “grotesque,” “a blatant lie” and “the worst
piece of fake news we've yet seen from the Russian propaganda
machine.”
One
of the interviews published by the ministry showed a man who said his
name was Halil Ajij, and who said he was a medical student working at
Douma’s only operational hospital. This is how he described the
origin of the footage:
“On
April 8, a bomb hit a building. The upper floors were damaged and a
fire broke at the lower floors. Victims of that bombing were brought
to us. People from the upper floors had smoke poisoning. We treated
them, based on their suffocation."
Ajij
said that a man unknown to him came and said there was a chemical
attack and panic ensued. “Relatives of the victims started dousing
each other with water. Other people, who didn’t seem to have
medical training, started administering anti-asthma medicine to
children. We didn’t see any patient with symptoms of a chemical
weapons poisoning,” he said.
The
first photos claiming to show the aftermath of the alleged chemical
attack on April 7 were published online on the same day, and featured
the bodies of many people, including children, some with foam around
their mouths and noses. Footage from the hospital was released on
Sunday, with the sources behind it claiming that it had been shot on
Saturday.
Konashenkov
said Russia hoped that international monitors from the Organization
for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW), which is due to
investigate the circumstances of the incident, will help establish
the truth. He added Eastern Ghouta is currently trying to return to
peaceful life after being liberated from militant groups by Syrian
government forces. He called on other nations and international
organizations to provide humanitarian aid, which is badly needed in
the area. Russia is already supplying food, medicine, building
materials and other essential supplies to the neighborhood, he said.
Residents
of the neighborhood, who previously fled violence, are returning to
their homes now that the area is relatively safe, the Russian
official said. The latest reports from the ground say about 63,000
people have returned, which is over half of the displaced residents,
he added.
The
reported chemical weapons attack escalated tensions over Syria, just
as Damascus was about to seize full control of Eastern Ghouta. The US
and allies such as the UK and France threatened military action in
response to what they claim is an atrocity committed by the Syrian
government. Russia insists the incident was staged and said it
reserves the right to counter any attack on Syria.
RT
spoke about the Russian claims with Lord Alan West, a retired officer
of the British Royal Navy. He said he had strong reservations about
taking allegations against Damascus at face value, because it didn’t
make much military sense.
“It
seems to be utterly ludicrous for the military that is in the process
of taking over an area to go and do something with chemical weapons,
which will draw the wrath of the larger enemy down upon them,” he
said. “If I was advising the opponents of [Syrian President Bashar]
Assad, I would be delighted to kill a few people there. Let’s face
it, [the insurgents] don’t care if they kill women and children.”
“I
am not willing to accept tweets. We need to see incontrovertible
truth about what has happened there and make a decision on that
basis,” he added.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.