Rescuers say toxic gas dropped on Syrian
town where Russian helicopter shot down
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[August 02, 2016]
By Lisa Barrington
BEIRUT (Reuters) - A Syrian rescue service
operating in rebel-held territory said on Tuesday a helicopter dropped
containers of toxic gas overnight on a town close to where a Russian
military helicopter was shot down hours earlier.
A spokesman for Syria Civil Defence said 33 people, mostly women and
children, were affected by the gas in Saraqeb, in rebel-held Idlib
province.
The group, which describes itself as a neutral band of search and rescue
volunteers, posted a video on YouTube apparently showing a number of men
struggling to breathe and being given oxygen masks by people in civil
defence uniforms.
Syria Civil Defence workers, who went to the scene of the attack, said
they suspected the gas was chlorine but could not verify that.
"Medium-sized barrels fell containing toxic gasses. The Syrian Civil
Defence was not able to determine the type of the gas," said the
spokesman.
The Syrian government and its Russian allies were not immediately
available for comment.
The Civil Defence spokesman said it was the second time Saraqeb had been
hit by toxic gas. The group was aware of around nine suspected chlorine
gas incidents across Idlib province since the conflict began, he said.
Monitors at the Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which
tracks violence on all sides in the civil war, said barrel bombs fell on
Saraqeb late on Monday, wounding a large number of citizens.
Russia's defence ministry said a Russian helicopter was shot down near
Saraqeb during the day on Monday, killing all five people on board, in
the biggest officially acknowledged loss of life for Russian forces
since they started operations in Syria.
DENIALS
The helicopter came down in Idlib province, roughly mid-way between
Aleppo and Russia's main air base at Khmeimim in the western province of
Latakia, near the Mediterranean coast.
Russian air power began supporting Syrian President Bashar al Assad late
last year, an intervention which tipped the balance of the war in
Assad's favour, eroding gains the rebels had made that year.
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Men inspect the wreckage of a Russian helicopter that had been shot
down in the north of Syria's rebel-held Idlib province, Syria August
1, 2016. REUTERS/Ammar Abdullah
The Russian defence ministry said the Mi-8 military transport
helicopter was shot down after delivering humanitarian aid to Aleppo
as it made its way back to Khmeimim.
No group has claimed responsibility for downing the helicopter.
Government and opposition forces have both denied using chemical
weapons during the five-year-old civil war. Western powers say the
government has been responsible for chlorine and other chemical
attacks. The government and Russia have accused rebels of using
poison gas.
U.N. investigators established that sarin gas was used in Eastern
Ghouta in 2013. The United States accused Damascus of that attack,
which it estimates killed 1,429 people, including at least 426
children. Damascus denied responsibility, and blamed rebels.
Later that year the United Nations and the Syrian government agreed
to destroy the state's declared stockpile of chemical weapons, a
process completed in January 2016.
The Organisation for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons confirmed
in late 2015 that sulphur mustard, commonly known as mustard gas,
had been used for the first time in the conflict, without saying
which party in the many sided conflict it thought had used it.
(Editing by Samia Nakhoul and Robin Pomeroy)
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