Craven
reporting by the BBC. They are unrepentent about spreading and
amplifying UK government lies about the Skripal “poisoning”. Why
would they stop there?
Syria
war: At least 70 reported dead in suspected gas attack
BBC,
7 April, 2018
Rescuers and medics say at least 70 people have died in Syria in a suspected gas attack in Douma, the last rebel-held town in Eastern Ghouta.
Volunteer rescue force the White Helmets tweeted graphic images showing several bodies in a basement. It said the death toll is likely to rise.
There
has been no independent verification of the reports.
Syria's
government has called the allegations of a chemical attack a
"fabrication".
The
US state department said it is monitoring the "very disturbing"
reports, and that Russia - which is fighting alongside the Syrian
government - should be held responsible if deadly chemicals had been
used.
"The
regime's history of using chemical weapons against its own people in
not in dispute," said the state department.
It
said it believed at least 40 people died, but that the toll may be
far higher.
What
do we know about the alleged gas attack?
Several
medical, monitoring and activist groups reported details of a
chemical attack, but figures vary and what happened is still becoming
clear.
The
pro-opposition Ghouta Media Center tweeted that more that 75 people
had "suffocated" while a further thousand people had
suffered the effects of the alleged gas attack.
It
blamed a barrel bomb allegedly dropped by a helicopter which it said
contained sarin, a toxic nerve agent.
The
Union of Medical Relief Organizations, a US-based charity that works
with Syrian hospitals, told the BBC the Damascus Rural Specialty
Hospital had confirmed 70 deaths.
Pro-government
forces are fighting to drive rebels out of Douma
A
spokeswoman said reports on the ground suggested a much higher number
of around 180 dead, but that it was hard to reach victims due to
continuous shelling and the time of night.
She
added there were reports of people being treated for symptoms
including convulsions and foaming of the mouth, consistent with nerve
or mixed nerve and chlorine gas exposure.
As
the allegations emerged, Syria's state news service Sana said the
reports were invented by the Jaish al-Islam rebels who remain in
control in Douma.
"Jaish
al-Islam terrorists are in a state of collapse and their media
outlets are [making] chemical attack fabrications in an exposed and
failed attempt to obstruct advances by the Syrian Arab army,"
state media said.
Has
the Syrian government used gas before?
In
August 2013, rockets containing the nerve agent sarin were fired at
rebel-held areas of Eastern Ghouta, killing hundreds of people.
A
UN mission confirmed the use of sarin, but it was not asked to state
who was responsible. Western powers said only Syrian government
forces could have carried out the attack.
In
April 2017, more than 80 people died in a sarin attack on the
opposition-held town of Khan Sheikhoun, and a joint inquiry by the UN
and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW)
held the Syrian government responsible.
Activists,
medics and the US say Syrian government forces dropped bombs
containing toxic chlorine gas on rebel-held towns in early 2018.
The
joint UN-OPCW mission is investigating the reports. It has previously
found that government forces have used chlorine as a weapon at least
three times during the seven-year civil war.
What's
happening in Douma?
Douma
is the last rebel-held town in Syria's Eastern Ghouta region, and is
under siege from Russian-backed Syrian government forces.
An
intense aerial and ground assault was launched on Friday after talks
between Moscow and the rebels broke down.
Before
negotiations failed, Jaish al-Islam had been trying to secure a deal
that would let its members stay in Douma as a local security force.
The
UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, a monitoring group,
said government air strikes had killed 40 civilians on Friday, and a
further 30 on Saturday.
State
media said six civilians had also died in rebel shelling of the
capital Damascus, with 38 injured. Jaish al-Islam denied it was
responsible.
From the US military mouthpiece
On
Tuesday, Russian officials claimed that militants are preparing to
use chemical agents in Syria, and intend to put the blame on the
government of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad, according to Tass, a
state-run news agency in Russia.
Russian
Army Gen. Valery Gerasimov said that the United States is planning to
then use the chemical attack as a way to "furnish the so-called
‘evidence’ of the alleged mass civilian deaths through the fault
of the Syrian government and the Russian leadership supporting it."
"As
a countermeasure, Washington plans to deliver a missile and bomb
strike against Damascus’ government districts," Gerasimov
said, according to Tass.
Russia
is ultimately to blame for any use of chemical weapons in Syria, U.S.
Secretary of State Rex Tillerson said Tuesday amid reports of a
suspected chemical attack this week near the capital, Damascus.
Those
assertions are a distraction from the Assad regime’s own use of
chemical weapons in the Syrian capital of Damascus, according to
Marine Maj. Adrian Rankine-Galloway, a Pentagon spokesman.....
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