Houston Chronicle

Alleged chemical attack kills dozens

Syria, Russia deny use of such weapons on rebel-held town as Trump blames Putin and Iran in Twitter posts

- By Ben Hubbard

BEIRUT — Dozens of Syrians choked to death after a suspected chemical attack struck the rebelheld suburb of Douma, east of Damascus, and aid groups Sunday blamed President Bashar Assad’s government for the assault. Rescue workers in Syria reported finding at least 42 people dead in their homes from apparent suffocatio­n, and anti-government activists circulated videos of lifeless men, women and children sprawled out on floors and in stairwells, many with white foam coming from their mouths and nostrils.

A stream of patients with burning eyes and breathing problems were rushed to clinics after the attack at dusk Saturday, medical and rescue groups said.

The attack appeared to break the will of Douma’s rebels, who agreed Sunday to a deal with the government to hand the area over and be bused to another area outside government control in the country’s north. Thousands of fighters and tens of thousands of their relatives are expected to leave soon.

The latest atrocity in Syria’s agonizing sevenyear civil war drew immediate condemnati­on from the United States and the European Union, but Assad’s allies in Moscow and Tehran dismissed allegation­s of a chemical attack as “bogus.”

The British Foreign Office called for an urgent investigat­ion and said that if the use of chemical weapons proved to be true, “it is further proof of Assad’s brutality.”

The U.S. government said it was working to verify that chemical weapons had been used. A new, confirmed chemical attack in Syria would pose a dilemma for President Donald Trump, who ordered military strikes on a Syrian air base after a chemical attack last year to punish Assad but has more re-

“The Assad regime and its backers must be held accountabl­e.” Heather Nauert, State Department

cently said he wants to get the United States out of Syria.

In posts on Twitter on Sunday, Trump condemned what he called a “mindless CHEMICAL attack” on women and children, blaming Iran and President Vladimir Putin of Russia for supporting the Syrian government and warning of the consequenc­es, including a possible military response.

Trump also took a jab at former President Barack Obama, who declined to respond militarily to evidence that the Syrian government had gassed its own people.

“If President Obama had crossed his stated Red Line In The Sand, the Syrian disaster would have ended long ago! Animal Assad would have been history!” Trump tweeted.

Last rebel-held town

State news media in Syria denied that government forces had used chemical weapons and accused the Islamist rebel group that controls Douma, the Army of Islam, of fabricatin­g the videos to solicit internatio­nal support as defeat loomed.

The Russian Foreign and Defense Ministries also denied that chemical weapons had been used.

It was not possible to independen­tly verify the reports because Douma is surrounded by Syrian government forces, which prevent access by journalist­s, aid workers and investigat­ors.

The attack occurred near the end of a monthslong push by the Syrian government to retake a group of towns east of Damascus known as Eastern Ghouta. The towns have been held by rebels seeking to topple Assad since the early years of the Syrian civil war, and the rebels have often shelled Damascus, killing civilians.

The Syrian government and its allies — the Russian military and militias backed by Iran — have surrounded and bombarded the area, killing more than 1,600 people and forcing tens of thousands to flee, according to the Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, which monitors the conflict from Britain through contacts in Syria.

Douma is the last remaining town still controlled by rebels in the area, and the Syrian government has vowed to retake it.

A day earlier, after the government began a new offensive against the area, Hussein Mortada, a Lebanese reporter who supports the Syrian government, released a video of himself on a hill near Douma as columns of smoke from government attacks rose in the background.

“These are appetizers,” he said. “The story is bigger than a ground invasion. There is something they will see today if the story continues. They will feel something very strong.”

The intensity of the shelling and airstrikes caused many residents to seek safety in basements, which could have made them more vulnerable to poisonous gases.

In a joint statement, the Syrian Civil Defense and the Syrian American Medical Society, which supports clinics in opposition areas of Syria, said that more than 500 people had gone to medical centers after the assault “with symptoms indicative of exposure to a chemical agent.” Those symptoms included trouble breathing, foaming at the mouth, burning eyes and the “emission of a chlorineli­ke odor.”

One person was dead on arrival at a clinic, six others died after they got there, and rescue workers reported finding more than 42 dead in their homes, the statement said. The bodies could not be evacuated because of strong odors and a lack of protective equipment.

“The reported symptoms indicate that the victims suffocated from the exposure to toxic chemicals,” the statement said.

Hundreds wounded

The Syrian Observator­y for Human Rights, which did not confirm the use of chemical agents, said that 56 people, including women and children, had been killed in the past 24 hours, including 21 who suffocated in the basements of buildings that had collapsed on them. About 500 others were wounded in the bombardmen­t, and 70 had breathing troubles, the group said.

“The Assad regime and its backers must be held accountabl­e, and any further attacks prevented immediatel­y,” a State Department spokeswoma­n, Heather Nauert, said in a statement. Nauert noted a sarin gas attack in April 2017 in northweste­rn Syria that the United States and the United Nations blamed on the Syrian government.

“The United States calls on Russia to end this unmitigate­d support immediatel­y and work with the internatio­nal community to prevent further, barbaric chemical weapons attacks,” Nauert said.

The Russian Foreign Ministry dismissed the reports as fake.

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