Opposition
activists again accused President Bashar al-Assad's forces of using
poison gas in Syria's civil war on Thursday, showing footage of an
apparently unconscious man lying on a bed and being treated by medics. The alleged attack on the
neighborhood of Jobar in the capital Damascus comes a week after the
Syrian government sent a letter to the United Nations claiming it had evidence that rebel groups were planning a toxic gas attack in the same area. Reuters could not independently verify the footage or the claims due to security restrictions on reporting in Syria. Activists
from the opposition "Jobar Revo" group posted the video on YouTube of a
man being treated with oxygen and being injected by medics. A voice
off-screen said Thursday's date and that there was "a poison attack in
Jobar." Another opposition group,
the Syrian Revolutionary Coordinators Union, said that all those
affected by the gas were "in a good condition". There has been on-off
fighting between rebels and government forces in Jobar this year. In a letter dated March 25 and circulated by the United Nations
this week, Syria's U.N. envoy, Bashar Ja'afari, said his government had
intercepted communications between "terrorists" that showed a man named
Abu Nadir was secretly distributing gas masks in the rebel-held Jobar
area. Ja'afari said in the letter
addressed to U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon and the U.N. Security
Council that this information "confirms that armed terrorist groups are
preparing to use toxic gas in Jobar quarter and other areas, in order to
accuse the Syrian government of having committed such an act of
terrorism." A U.N. inquiry found in
December that sarin gas had likely been used in Jobar in August and in
several other locations, including in the rebel-held Damascus suburb of
Ghouta, where hundreds of people were killed. The
inquiry was only looking at whether chemical weapons were used, not who
used them. The Syrian government and the opposition have each accused
the other of using chemical weapons, and both have denied it. The
Ghouta attack sparked global outrage and a U.S. threat of military
strikes, which was dropped after Assad pledged to destroy his chemical
weapons. But the Syrian government
failed to meet a February 5 deadline to move all of its declared
chemical substances and precursors, some 1,300 tones, out of the
country. Syria has since agreed to a new timetable to remove the weapons by late April. Syria's three-year civil war has killed more than 150,000 people, a third of them civilians, and caused millions to flee. Reuters
Syrian opposition accuses Assad of new poison attack
Zaman Alwasl
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