Chattanooga Times Free Press

Death toll rises,

- BY SARAH EL DEEB

BEIRUT — The grief-stricken father cradled his 9-month-old twins, Aya and Ahmed, each in the crook of an arm. Stroking their hair, he choked back tears, mumbling, “Say goodbye, baby, say goodbye” to their lifeless bodies.

Then Abdel Hameed Alyousef took them to a mass grave where 22 members of his family were being buried. Each branch of the clan got its own trench.

More than 80 people, including at least 30 children and 20 women, were killed in the chemical attack on the Syrian town of Khan Sheikhoun early Tuesday, and the toll could still rise. The Alyousef family, one of the town’s main clans, was hardest hit.

Another member of the family, Aya Fadl, recalled running from her house with her 20-month-old son in her arms, thinking she could find safety from the toxic gas in the street. Instead, the 25-year-old English teacher came face to face with the horror of it: A pickup truck piled with the bodies of the dead, including many of her own relatives and students.

“Ammar, Aya, Mohammed,

Ahmad, I love you my birds, really they were like birds. Aunt Sana, Uncle Yasser, Abdul-Kareem, please hear me,” Fadl said, choking back tears as she recalled how she said farewell to her relatives in the pile.

“I saw them. They were dead. All are dead now.”

The tragedy has devastated the town of several tens of thousands of residents. It also deepened the frustratio­n felt by many Syrians in opposition-held areas that such scenes of mass death that have become routine in the country’s 6-year-old civil war bring no recourse or even determinat­ion of responsibi­lity.

The U.S. and other Western countries accused President

Bashar Assad of being behind the attack, while Syria and its main backer Russia denied it. Despite world condemnati­on, bringing justice is difficult in the absence of independen­t investigat­ion of Syria’s chemical arsenal, which the government insists it has destroyed.

“My heart is broken. Everything was terrible. Everyone was crying and couldn’t breathe,” Fadl told The Associated Press Wednesday in a series of voice messages. “We had many circumstan­ces in Syria and we had many difficult situations. This is the most difficult and most harmful situation I ever had.”

In 2013, horrific scenes of Syrians flooding hospitals or found dead in their homes after a sarin gas attack that killed hundreds in the rebel-held Damascus suburb of Ghouta provoked internatio­nal condemnati­on. A Russian-brokered deal followed, allowing Assad to declare he has destroyed his chemical stockpile and joined the Chemical Weapons Convention. But a year later, chlorine gas attacks became recurrent, killing scores of people.

However, Tuesday’s massacre was not caused by chlorine, an irritant with limited ability to kill. The high number of casualties, as well as the grave symptoms including convulsion­s, constricte­d pupils and vomiting point to a more complex chemical gas.

A Doctors Without Borders medical team, which examined a number of victims in a hospital near the border with Turkey, said the symptoms are consistent with exposure to a neurotoxic agent— at least two different chemical agents. The U.S.’s early assessment is that it involved the use of chlorine and sarin, according to two U.S. officials who weren’t authorized to speak publicly on the matter and demanded anonymity.

In Khan Sheikhoun, the tragedy was compounded because so many victims

were from a single extended family, the Alyousef clan.

 ?? COURTESY OF AYA FADL VIA AP ?? Aya Fadl lies on a bed with an oxygen mask to help her breathing after a suspected chemical attack on her town of Khan Sheikhoun, Syria.
COURTESY OF AYA FADL VIA AP Aya Fadl lies on a bed with an oxygen mask to help her breathing after a suspected chemical attack on her town of Khan Sheikhoun, Syria.

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