AIR STRIKES POUND SYRIA'S LAST REBEL STRONGHOLDS, GAS CHOKES CIVILIANS
A man is seen near the remains of a rocket in Douma, Eastern Ghouta in Damascus, Syria January 22, 2018. REUTERS |
Warplanes
launched heavy attacks on the two-last major rebel-held areas in Syria, killing
at least 29 people in the Ghouta suburb near the capital and choking people
with gas in Idlib in the northwest, rescue workers and a war monitor said on
Monday.
President Bashar al-Assad’s government
has vowed to retake all of Syria from rebels who have lost large swaths of the
territory they have held in a war now entering its eighth year.
A years-long siege on the last major
rebel-held area near the capital Damascus, the suburb of eastern Ghouta, has
tightened in recent months. In the northwest, the government and its militia
allies have been trying to advance in mostly rural Idlib, the last province
still largely under rebel control.
The Britain-based Syrian Observatory
for Human Rights monitoring group said warplanes attacking eastern Ghouta near
Damascus had struck the towns of Zamalka, Arbaeen, Hazza and Beitu Soua,
killing at least 29 people. State media said rebel fighters shelling the
government-held capital killed a woman.
International concern has been growing
over the fate of eastern Ghouta, where residents say they have been running out
of food and medicine.
In the northwest, the other main
battlefield in the war between Assad’s government and its main rebel opponents,
bombing also intensified on Sunday night after rebels shot down a Russian
warplane on Saturday.
Rescue workers said at least nine
people had suffered breathing problems from chemicals dropped from the air. Aid
groups and rescuers said three hospitals had also been struck.
The Syrian American Medical Society
(SAMS), a charity which supports hospitals in Syria, said its doctors in Idlib
reported 11 patients “with symptoms indicative to usage of chlorine”.
Two barrels containing chemical gasses
had been dropped from helicopters on Sunday night, Radi Saad, from the chemical
weapons team of the White Helmets civil defense group that operates in
rebel-held parts of Syria, told Reuters.
The International Committee of the Red
Cross (ICRC), the White Helmets and the U.S.-based Union of Medical Care and
Relief Organizations (UOSSM) said healthcare facilities in northwestern Syria
had been hit by air strikes.
“With the majority of hospitals no
longer operating in these areas, these latest attacks will deprive tens of
thousands of life-saving care,” the ICRC said on Twitter.
The Syrian government has consistently
denied using chlorine or other chemical weapons during Syria’s conflict. Rescue
workers and medical groups have accused government forces of using chlorine gas
against the rebel-held eastern Ghouta at least three times over the last month,
most recently on Thursday.
In Washington, the State Department
said in a statement that the United States was “gravely alarmed” by reports the
Syrian government has used chlorine gas in Idlib.
“The use of chemical weapons by all
parties in Syria must unequivocally stop,” it said.
“ABHORRENT ACT”
Syria agreed to give up its chemical
weapons arsenal in 2013. In the past two years, a joint inquiry by the United
Nations and the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) has
found the Syrian government used the nerve agent sarin and has also several
times used chlorine as a weapon. The inquiry also said the Islamic State group
has used sulphur mustard.
The United States and Russia clashed
at the U.N. Security Council on Monday over the use of chemical weapons in
Syria. Washington accused Moscow of shielding Assad from accountability; Moscow
accused Washington of slandering Russia.
The German government called on Monday
for a thorough investigation into reports Syria had used chemical weapons in
both Idlib and eastern Ghouta.
“If it is confirmed that the Syrian
government has once again used chemical weapons, that would be an abhorrent act
and an egregious violation of the moral and legal obligation to avoid the use
of chemical weapons,” a German foreign ministry official said.
U.S. Defense Secretary Jim Mattis said
last week that the Syrian government had repeatedly used chlorine as a weapon,
and Washington was also concerned about the potential use of sarin.
The Syrian civil war has killed
hundreds of thousands of people and driven more than 11 million from their
homes. Neighbors and global powers have been drawn into the multi-sided
conflict, sponsoring allied groups on the ground.
Turkish forces are in northwest Syria,
entering Idlib under a “de-escalation” agreement reached with Assad’s backers
Russia and Iran. They also expanded their operation two weeks ago into the
nearby Afrin region to fight against Kurdish militias who hold that territory.
The Turkish army said on Monday its
forces had set up a military post southwest of the Syrian city of Aleppo, the
deepest position they have established so far inside northwest Syria under
their deal with Russia and Iran.
The “de-escalation” in violence they
were supposed to monitor has collapsed. In December, the Syrian army alongside
Iran-backed militias and heavy Russian air power launched a major offensive to
take territory in Idlib province.
The Observatory said the new Turkish
observation post was near the village of al-Eis. That would place it less than
5 km (3 miles) from territory held by Syrian government forces and their
allies, and deeper inside Syria than the three observation posts set up by the
Turkish army so far.
Source: Reuters
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