Red Line Suffocating In The Streets: Chemical Weapons Attack Reported In Syria
Tuesday, March 19, 2013 7:24
Residents and medics transport a wounded Syrian army soldier to
hospital Tuesday after heavy fighting in Aleppo province during which
both rebels and government forces said a chemical weapon was used.
March 19, 2013 – DAMASCUS – Syria’s
government and rebels accused each other of launching a deadly chemical
attack near the northern city of Aleppo on Tuesday in what would, if
confirmed, be the first use of such weapons in the two-year-old
conflict. Syria’s state news agency SANA said the rebels had launched a
missile, while the rebels said the government had fired a long-range
missile with “chemical agents. Terrorists fired a rocket containing
chemical substances in the Khan al-Assal area of rural Aleppo,” SANA
said. A Reuters photographer visited two hospitals and saw people with
breathing problems, who told him that they saw people dying in the
streets and that the air smelled strongly of chlorine. U.S.
President Barack Obama, who has resisted overt military intervention in
Syria’s civil war, has warned Assad that any use of chemical weapons
would be a “red line.” A spokeswoman for Britain’s Foreign
Office said it was aware of the reports, adding that the use of
chemical weapons, if proven, would “demand a serious response from the
international community and force us to revisit our approach so far.”
Syria’s Information Minister Omran al-Zoabi put the death toll at 16 and
said 86 people were wounded, most of them critically. In a televised
news conference, he said the country’s armed forces would never use
internationally banned weapons. “Syria’s army leadership has stressed
this before and we say it again, if we had chemical weapons we would
never use them due to moral, humanitarian and political reasons,” Zoabi
said. However, a Syrian rebel commander denied the reports, insisting
the government had fired the rocket during intense fighting in the area.
“We were hearing reports from early this morning about a regime attack
on Khan al-Assal, and we believe they fired a Scud with chemical
agents,” Qassim Saadeddine, a senior rebel and spokesman for the Higher
Military Council in Aleppo, said. “Then suddenly we learned that the
regime was turning these reports against us. The rebels were not behind
this attack,” he added. The Reuters photographer, who visited the
University of Aleppo hospital and the al-Rajaa hospital in Aleppo city,
said he saw patients who were suffering from breathing problems. “I saw
mostly women and children,” he said. “They said that people were
suffocating in the streets and the air smelt strongly of chlorine.
People were dying in the streets and in their houses,” he added. Syrian
state TV aired footage of what it said were casualties of the attack
arriving at one hospital in Aleppo. Men, women and children were rushed
inside on stretchers as doctors inserted medical drips into their arms
and oxygen tubes into their mouths. None had visible wounds to their
bodies, but some interviewed said they had trouble breathing. Three boys
lay on the floor beside each other with drips in their arms. One man
was taken from an ambulance wearing combat trousers. An unidentified
doctor interviewed on the channel said the attack was either “phosphorus
or poison.” -MSNBC
Obama Warns Syria Against Using Chemical Weapons: http://youtu.be/bsO3ehh8UEk via @youtube AP: December 2012
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