Suspected chlorine gas attacks by Syrian government helicopters injured some 40 people and killed a child in the country's northwest, activists said today, a day after an international chemical weapons watchdog said it was ready to investigate a series of newly claimed attacks.
Videos shared by the Syrian Civil Defense activist group showed medics and residents rushing children to a local hospital as they coughed, some gasping for air in Saraqeb, a town in Idlib province. A video from Nareb, another town in the province where a coalition of insurgent groups has made gains in recent days against troops loyal to President Bashar Assad, showed a medic receiving oxygen himself after rescuing people from another attack.
The videos appeared genuine and corresponded to other Associated Press reporting about the attacks.
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There was no mention of the attacks in Syrian state media.
Chlorine was first introduced as a chemical weapon in World War I with disastrous effects as gas masks were not widely available. While chlorine has many industrial and public uses, as a weapon it can choke victims to death.
Most nations banned its use in war in the Geneva Protocol of 1925. The U.S. And other countries have blamed Assad's government of repeatedly of dropping chlorine from helicopters during the civil war, as no other force is flying them in the conflict. Forces loyal to Assad have blamed rebels for such attacks.
The suspected attacks come a day after The Associated Press obtained a report by the Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons saying a fact-finding team from the group is ready to look into multiple allegations of chlorine attacks in recent months. The Syrian government would need to approve the group's visit.
Activists had reported a similar attack on Saraqeb on Wednesday.
The suspected chemical attacks come as government forces in Idlib province battle a joint insurgent campaign that has punctured the notion that Assad is on his way to defeating the four-year-old rebellion.