UK Journalist Robert Fisk from the Independent confirms there was NO "chemical weapon" attack in #Douma.
Children were treated from dust inhalation from shelling.
Fake videos were produced by #WhiteHelmets propagandists & Jaish-al-Islam terrorists.
#FalseFlag
#SyriaStatement
Robert
Fisk Reports Head of Douma Clinic Denies Chemical Weapons Attack
15
April, 2018
Robert
Fisk is one of the very few excellent investigative journalists still
employed in the UK. He is twice winner of the British
Press Awards‘
Journalist
of the Year prize, and seven time winner of the British Press Awards’
Foreign Correspondent of the Year. He is extremely smart and knows
the Middle East very well. He has just made his way – not
accompanied by Russian or Syrian government officials – to Douma
and this is what he reports.
If
you care to search for Robert Fisk on twitter, the attacks on his
reputation and integrity at this very moment from achieve nothing
neo-con trolls and media lackeys are astonishing. He is in Douma –
they are at their desks.
It
also says a great deal about our media that one of the greatest
living British journalists is employed only by The Independent, a
newspaper which has become extremely marginal, while other genuine
greats like Jon Pilger, with a fantastic pedigree, do not have access
to UK mainstream media at all. 60,000 people on average are reading
my journalism here every day, but no mainstream outlet will carry it.
UPDATE
you can now read Fisk’s brilliant report from Douma here.
Excellent journalism with appropriate scepticism of all sides, and
vital information of the nature of the jihadists the UK/US/Saudi
Arabia and Israel so desperately support.
The
search for truth in the rubble of Douma - and one doctor’s doubts
over the chemical attack
Exclusive:
Robert Fisk visits the Syria clinic at the centre of a global crisis
15
April, 2018
This
is the story of a town called Douma, a ravaged, stinking place of
smashed apartment blocks -- and of an underground clinic whose images
of suffering allowed three of the Western world’s most powerful
nations to bomb Syria last week. There’s even a friendly doctor in
a green coat who, when I track him down in the very same clinic,
cheerfully tells me that the ‘gas’ videotape which horrified the
world – despite all the doubters – is perfectly genuine.
War
stories, however, have a habit of growing darker. For the same
58-year old senior Syrian doctor then adds something profoundly
uncomfortable: the patients, he says, were overcome not by gas but by
oxygen starvation in the rubbish-filled tunnels and basements in
which they lived, on a night of wind and heavy shelling that stirred
up a dust storm.
As
Dr Assim Rahaibani announces this extraordinary conclusion, it is
worth observing that he is by his own admission not an eye witness
himself and, as he speaks good English, he refers twice to the jihadi
gunmen of Jaish el-Islam [the Army of Islam] in Douma as “terrorists”
– the regime’s word for their enemies, and a term used by many
people across Syria. Am I hearing this right? Which version of events
are we to believe?
Had
the Syria debate come before bombing, it would have been the same
EU
'understands' Syria air strikes but calls for 'urgent' peace talks
By
bad luck, too, the doctors who were on duty that night on 7 April
were all in Damascus giving evidence to a chemical weapons enquiry,
which will be attempting to provide a definitive answer to that
question in the coming weeks.
France,
meanwhile, has said it has “proof” chemical weapons were used,
and US media have quoted sources saying urine and blood tests showed
this too. The WHO has said its partners on the ground treated 500
patients “exhibiting signs and symptoms consistent with exposure to
toxic chemicals”.
At
the same time, inspectors from the Organisation for the Prohibition
of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) are currently blocked from coming here to
the site of the alleged gas attack themselves, ostensibly because
they lacked the correct UN permits.
Before
we go any further, readers should be aware that this is not the only
story in Douma. There are the many people I talked amid the ruins of
the town who said they had “never believed in” gas stories –
which were usually put about, they claimed, by the armed Islamist
groups. These particular jihadis survived under a blizzard of
shellfire by living in other’s people’s homes and in vast, wide
tunnels with underground roads carved through the living rock by
prisoners with pick-axes on three levels beneath the town. I walked
through three of them yesterday, vast corridors of living rock which
still contained Russian – yes, Russian – rockets and burned-out
cars.
So
the story of Douma is thus not just a story of gas – or no gas, as
the case may be. It’s about thousands of people who did not opt for
evacuation from Douma on buses that left last week, alongside the
gunmen with whom they had to live like troglodytes for months in
order to survive. I walked across this town quite freely yesterday
without soldier, policeman or minder to haunt my footsteps, just two
Syrian friends, a camera and a notebook. I sometimes had to clamber
across 20-foot-high ramparts, up and down almost sheer walls of
earth. Happy to see foreigners among them, happier still that the
siege is finally over, they are mostly smiling; those whose faces you
can see, of course, because a surprising number of Douma’s women
wear full-length black hijab.
I
first drove into Douma as part of an escorted convoy of journalists.
But once a boring general had announced outside a wrecked council
house “I have no information” – that most helpful rubbish-dump
of Arab officialdom -- I just walked away. Several other reporters,
mostly Syrian, did the same. Even a group of Russian journalists –
all in military attire – drifted off.
It
was a short walk to Dr Rahaibani. From the door of his subterranean
clinic – “Point 200,” it is called, in the weird geology of
this partly-underground city – is a corridor leading downhill where
he showed me his lowly hospital and the few beds where a small girl
was crying as nurses treated a cut above her eye.
“I
was with my family in the basement of my home three hundred metres
from here on the night but all the doctors know what happened. There
was a lot of shelling [by government forces] and aircraft were always
over Douma at night -- but on this night, there was wind and huge
dust clouds began to come into the basements and cellars where people
lived. People began to arrive here suffering from hypoxia, oxygen
loss. Then someone at the door, a ‘White Helmet’, shouted ‘Gas!”,
and a panic began. People started throwing water over each other.
Yes, the video was filmed here, it is genuine, but what you see are
people suffering from hypoxia – not gas poisoning.”
Independent
Middle East Correspondent Robert Fisk in one of the miles of tunnels
hacked beneath Douma by prisoners of Syrian rebels (Yara Ismail)
Oddly,
after chatting to more than 20 people, I couldn’t find one who
showed the slightest interest in Douma’s role in bringing about the
Western air attacks. Two actually told me they didn’t know about
the connection.
But
it was a strange world I walked into. Two men, Hussam and Nazir Abu
Aishe, said they were unaware how many people had been killed in
Douma, although the latter admitted he had a cousin “executed by
Jaish el-Islam [the Army of Islam] for allegedly being “close to
the regime”. They shrugged when I asked about the 43 people said to
have died in the infamous Douma attack.
The
White Helmets – the medical first responders already legendary in
the West but with some interesting corners to their own story –
played a familiar role during the battles. They are partly funded by
the Foreign Office and most of the local offices were staffed by
Douma men. I found their wrecked offices not far from Dr Rahaibani’s
clinic. A gas mask had been left outside a food container with one
eye-piece pierced and a pile of dirty military camouflage uniforms
lay inside one room. Planted, I asked myself? I doubt it. The place
was heaped with capsules, broken medical equipment and files, bedding
and mattresses.
Of
course we must hear their side of the story, but it will not happen
here: a woman told us that every member of the White Helmets in Douma
abandoned their main headquarters and chose to take the
government-organised and Russian-protected buses to the rebel
province of Idlib with the armed groups when the final truce was
agreed.
There
were food stalls open and a patrol of Russian military policemen –
a now optional extra for every Syrian ceasefire – and no-one had
even bothered to storm into the forbidding Islamist prison near
Martyr’s Square where victims were supposedly beheaded in the
basements. The town’s complement of Syrian interior ministry
civilian police – who eerily wear military clothes – are watched
over by the Russians who may or may not be watched by the civilians.
Again, my earnest questions about gas were met with what seemed
genuine perplexity.
Here is parallel reporting from RT
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.