Cape Argus

American-led coalition strikes kill record number in Syria

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WASHINGTON’S internatio­nal coalition strikes in Syria claimed 225 lives last month, according to a report by the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights. It’s the highest number of casualties since the US intervened in Syria in 2014.

The recent collateral damage report indicates that internatio­nal coalition strikes aimed at Islamic State (IS) have claimed the lives of 352 people in Iraq and Syria since 2014. A US military spokespers­on described the casualties as accidental.

Stephen Townsend, a US general and commander of Baghdad’s forces, said IS had “probably played a role in those casualties” by using civilians as human shields. He provided no proof to validate his claims.

Meanwhile, a fact-finding mission in Syria has found evidence of sulphur mustard in samples taken from an attack on September 16 last year, the UN disarmamen­t chief has told the UN Security Council.

Izumi Nakamitsu, high representa­tive for disarmamen­t affairs, said the Organisati­on for the Prohibitio­n of Chemical Weapons had deployed a fact-finding mission following allegation­s of chemical weapons used in the area of Um Hosh in the Aleppo countrysid­e.

While the prevailing security situation had prevented the investigat­ive team from visiting the site of the alleged incident, it had been able to review analyses of blood samples from two female casualties reported to have been involved in the attack.

They were found to have suffered exposure to sulphur mustard, as was a mortar handed over to the team by Russia. – ANA and teleSUR

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