Santa Fe New Mexican

Syrian family’s agony raises fear of chemical warfare

ISIS is using banned weapons in its attacks

- By C.J. Chivers

GAZIANTEP, Turkey — The warning from the front lines came by walkie-talkie. An Islamic State artillery position had boomed to the east, signaling that an incoming round was whistling toward Marea, a town on northern Syria’s agricultur­al flatland.

“One shell fired!” the voice on the radio said. “Be careful!”

Inside the house he shared with his family, Abu Anas Ishara, a rebel fighter defending his hometown, knew the routine. Usually 10 to 15 seconds passed before shells landed and exploded.

But Marea had been struck so often that Abu Anas had wearied of it all. He did not seek cover. Nada, his wife, kept feeding their infant daughter, Sidra, delivered by cesarean section five days before.

The shell hit the roof of their home.

As the couple were enveloped by dust and foul-smelling smoke, Shahad, their 3-year-old daughter, cried out. “Papa!” she screamed. Abu Anas and Nada staggered outside, each carrying a child, all seemingly unharmed. It was the morning of Aug. 21. Their descent into the confusion and scorching pain of a chemical warfare attack had begun.

Struck from afar by a blister-agent shell, the family would suffer from an agonizing form of violence that since the 1990s — when the Convention on Chemical Weapons took force in much of the world — had seemed to fade into the past, only to be revived by the Islamic State.

Since the spring, the group has used two types of chemical weapons in Iraq and Syria multiple times, according to internatio­nal arms analysts, victims, local activists and Western officials, joining

Syria’s government as a party in the conflict that has used chemical weapons.

The weapons have included improvised bombs containing chlorine, a toxic industrial chemical that Sunni militants in Iraq have crudely weaponized in vehicle and roadside bombs for roughly a decade, and artillery or mortar projectile­s containing a blister agent that appeared this summer after being fired from Islamic State battlefiel­d positions.

These projectile­s have delivered sulfur mustard, an internatio­nally banned chemical warfare agent, according to U.S. officials familiar with the analysis of soil samples, ordnance and victims’ clothing collected after several attacks. Two U.S. officials said items analyzed from the Aug. 21 attack on Marea were among those that confirmed the agent’s use.

As is common in areas of Syria beset by fighting, most houses in Marea were empty. The town’s former residents had abandoned them, choosing the indignitie­s and uncertaint­ies of life as refugees over the dangers and dimming prospects for peace at home.

But some homes remained occupied, often by people too proud, too stubborn or too poor to leave, or by families of rebels who stayed to fight. Several dozen of Marea’s remaining residents were exposed, many of them mildly, local medical officials said.

Abu Anas and Nada, and members of their extended family, agreed to be interviewe­d about their much heavier exposure on condition that their surnames not be published, because they feared retaliatio­n from the Islamic State.

Abu Anas had heard of the evidence and allegation­s of previous chemical use, including of nerve agent and chlorine, by the government of President Bashar Assad. He had not suspected the militants of having chemical weapons, too.

Something about this shell was different. It hit the roof ’s slab of reinforced concrete, but only smashed a pearshape hole a few feet across. It did not explode, as most shells do. The flash of fire, pressure and hot shrapnel, which together can instantly kill people, had not occurred.

Instead, Abu Anas said, as the dust fell on him, he felt as if he had been coated in warm sand. Soon an odor filled the home.

It smelled, he said, like “rotten eggs or rotten garlic, something rotten.” It rose from his clothes, too.

Sulfur mustard causes burns that can damage the skin, eyes and respirator­y tract. Carcinogen­ic and extremely toxic, it can also cause invisible internal damage, including to bone marrow, reducing blood-cell production. Heavy exposure can cause death within days.

But its effects are not immediate. Symptoms usually appear after an hourslong delay.

Nada, too, wondered what had happened. She suffered no early symptoms. After taking shelter with a neighbor, she and her husband returned to the house several times to gather belongings, not realizing the risks.

Abu Anas recorded a cellphone video of the broken ceiling and pocked walls, as if they were lucky to be alive.

But as hours passed, Nada could not console Sidra, her newborn, though she found no marks or bruises on the child. The baby was falling ill, and Nada did not know why.

“I tried to wash her little body,” she said. “I washed her face and her body, but she kept crying.”

As the afternoon passed the family became unmistakab­ly unwell. Shahad complained of pain in her throat. The baby fell quiet, awake but disturbing­ly sluggish, almost still. Abu Anas’ eyes were searing. Tears ran down his face. He felt nauseated.

Abu Anas and Nada gathered the children and set out for help.

Late that afternoon, the staff at a field hospital in Marea examined the baby and urged the family to seek better care; an ambulance carried them to a hospital in nearby Tel Rifaat. There, Nada and Abu Anas said, a manager told them that they had been exposed to chemical weapons, and that they needed treatment in Turkey. He ordered the driver to rush them north.

By the time the family crossed the border, it was night. At the first hospital, in Kilis, they were given face masks and assessed.

Blisters had risen on Sidra, the baby, and were starting to appear on Shahad, who was coughing. The medical staff began decontamin­ating them, trying to scrub them clean, Abu Anas said. The little girls cried and wailed uncontroll­ably. Unable to console them or relieve their pain, he felt helpless.

The doctors told Nada and Abu Anas their children were very sick, then separated the family and began examining the adults.

“They cut my clothes off, so I was naked, and began to spray me” with a pressure washer that forced water through a wide nozzle, Abu Anas said.

Doctors found fresh blisters coating part of his upper back, apparently where a chemical agent had soaked through his clothes.

Until then, he said, he had not realized he had been burned. But as the water hit him, he felt excruciati­ng pain. He vomited again.

Nada’s burns were more extensive, spreading over much of her body and limbs.

The doctors admitted the children and transferre­d the couple to a larger hospital in this city, where, over Abu Anas’ objections about pain he did not think he could endure, he and his wife were decontamin­ated a second time.

They never saw their baby again. For almost two weeks the doctors withheld details of Sidra’s condition, Abu Anas and Nada said, as the child slipped from life.

She had died on Sept. 4. The hospital staff showed Nada a photograph of her baby, swollen and burned. Much of the child’s hair seemed to have been scalded away.

“They told me she is dead, and now she is one of the birds in paradise,” she said.

Nada had carried Sidra for nine months only to lose her within days. The time had been too short, Nada said, even to absorb clear memories of how her daughter looked.

“Her eyes were always closed,” she said, “as if she didn’t want life.”

On Sept. 7, the hospital released the dead child to two of Abu Anas’ brothers, who were driven with the body to a cemetery beside Gaziantep’s airport.

By mid-September, the three survivors’ burns had scarred over. Shahad — burned across her abdomen, arms, back and legs, but healing — was reunited with her parents. The family moved from hospital beds to mattresses on a cramped apartment rented by Nada’s father, Adel, an auto mechanic who is also a refugee.

Wincing, weak and short of breath, wearing sunglasses inside as he rested beside a plastic bag of phlegm-soaked tissues, Abu Anas was waiting for space in a Turkish refugee camp.

There they would need many more months to heal, he said — for burned skin to stop tingling and itching, for breathing to become easy and clear, for eyesight to be restored. Then they might wait out Syria’s ceaseless war — minus Sidra, struck by chemical weapons before the end of her first week of life.

“God loved her,” Adel said, and so he took her to spare her more of a suffering that no one should bear.

 ?? BRYAN DENTON/THE NEW YORK TIMES ?? Shadad, Abu Anas’ surviving daughter who carries the scars of a chemical weapon attack on her home in Marea, Syria, is shown Oct. 1 in Kahramanma­ras, Turkey.
BRYAN DENTON/THE NEW YORK TIMES Shadad, Abu Anas’ surviving daughter who carries the scars of a chemical weapon attack on her home in Marea, Syria, is shown Oct. 1 in Kahramanma­ras, Turkey.

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