The National - News

ONE YEAR AFTER SYRIAN REGIME’S SARIN ATTACK, SURVIVORS WANT MORE ACTION

▶ At least 80 people were killed at Khan Sheikhoun, prompting internatio­nal condemnati­on, but little action followed

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On his wedding anniversar­y tomorrow, Abdulhamid Yusuf will have nothing to mark but a chemical attack that killed his wife and their two babies.

At least 80 people died on April 4 last year when warplanes dropped sarin gas on his hometown of Khan Sheikhoun in north-west Syria.

The chemical attack on the rebel-held town was one of the most shocking of Syria’s seven-year war, causing global outrage and rare retaliator­y air strikes by the United States.

“I’ve been deprived of part of my body, of my soul,” said Mr Yusuf, 29, breaking into tears as he sat in the garden of his empty home.

An image of him holding the lifeless bodies of his 11-monthold twins – Aya and Ahmad – spread around the world. His wife, Dalal, and 16 other relatives, including a brother, nephew and many cousins, were also killed.

Mr Yusuf’s grief and anger remain raw 12 months on as he visits the cemetery to weed the graves of his loved ones.

“I won’t be able to start over. I won’t forget the past,” he said.

Khan Sheikhoun is in Syria’s Idlib province, the last in the country to remain largely beyond the control of President Bashar Al Assad.

UN war crimes investigat­ors said they have evidence Syrian government forces were responsibl­e for the attack on Khan Sheikhoun. The allegation­s were rejected by the Assad regime and its ally Russia.

“We want the internatio­nal community to take a strong stand … Assad needs to pay,” Mr Yusuf said.

Thirty children were among those killed in the early morning raid, the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights said.

Witnesses said people dropped to the ground, convulsing violently, some with white foam pouring from their mouths.

Ahmad Al Yusuf, 20, lost his parents and young brothers, Mohammed and Anwar, on a day he says he will never forget.

His mother had woken him to perform morning prayers before he headed out to work on his grandfathe­r’s land.

After the strikes hit, he rushed back home to find his neighbour sitting on the ground, shaking uncontroll­ably and incapable of talking – but staring straight at him.

“I’ll never forget that day or those details,” said the young man, who now runs the family’s convenienc­e store on his own. “I lost all my family – everything that was dearest to me.”

He clings on to their memory even as he adapts to his new life alone.

“Whether I’m coming or going at home, I always see them in front of me.”

The deadly strikes on Khan Sheikhoun sparked internatio­nal condemnati­on and caused the United States to fire 59 Tomahawk cruise missiles at the Syrian airfield allegedly used in the attack.

But the bereaved residents feel nothing more substantia­l has been done to hold those responsibl­e to account.

Mohamed Al Jawhara, 24, lost his parents, nephew and several cousins.

“It was such a shock. How do you bear seeing them all die in a single day?”

The Khan Sheikhoun attack was yet another low point in Syria’s war, which started in 2011 with the brutal repression of anti-government protests.

Several rounds of UN-backed talks have failed to stem the fighting and Russia-backed regime forces have instead made significan­t military gains across the country.

Mr Jawhara expresses frustratio­n at what he sees as the insufficie­nt response of the internatio­nal community in holding Mr Assad to account.

“We hoped he would be tried and have to pay” for what he did, said the student, who aims to be a teacher one day.

World leaders “have made statement after statement, but in the end they have been weak”.

 ?? AFP ?? Abdulhamid Yusuf lost 19 members of his family, including his wife and two children. His wedding anniversar­y is tomorrow
AFP Abdulhamid Yusuf lost 19 members of his family, including his wife and two children. His wedding anniversar­y is tomorrow

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