Originally, they assaulted Syria accusing her of having and using toxic-chlorine gas weapons. Later they found out that, by Russian intervention, the toxic gas weapons were taken out of the country and destroyed, if there were any at all!...Now, the US Corporation Handlers, through DAESH etal, attack the Syrian population with them!Unfair!
We Do Not Approve! We Do Not Agree! We Do Not Consent! Καθόλου!!! In Fact , πιό καθόλου ΔΕΝ Γίνεται! μ.λ.π.
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Des groupes terroristes ont également tiré des roquettes sur les quartiers de Hamadaniya et de Salaheddine faisant deux morts et des dizaines de blessés.
Le Centre russe pour la réconciliation des parties belligérantes en Syrie ont annoncé via un communiqué paru mardi soir que des terroristes de l'Etat Islamique ainsi que du Front al-Nosra continuaient à bombarder certains quartiers à Alep et à Damas.
Les attaques interviennent dans un contexte difficile de l'opération humanitaire menée à Alep par les forces gouvernementales syrienne avec l'aide des forces russes.
Ailleurs en Syrie
Un porte-parole de la défense civile en Syrie a déclaré que 33 personnes, principalement des femmes et des enfants, avaient été empoisonnées à une substance chimique qu'elle soupçonne être du chlore à Saraqeb, dans la province d'Idlib à 50 kilomètres d'Alep.«Des barils de taille moyenne contenant du gaz toxique, dont la Défense civile syrienne n'a pas été en mesure de déterminer le type, ont été largués [de l'hélicoptère]», a déclaré le porte-parole de la Défense civile.
Le groupe de secouristes, qui se décrit comme un groupe bénévole neutre de recherche et de sauvetage, a posté une vidéo sur Youtube montrant un certain nombre d'hommes luttant pour respirer tandis que des membres de la défense civile tiennent des masques à oxygène sur leur visage.
L'opposition de la Coalition nationale syrienne (SNC) a accusé le gouvernement du président Bachar el-Assad d'être derrière l'attaque, ce que le président syrien a démenti, rappelant que l'armée syrienne n'utilisait pas d'armes chimiques.
Le porte-parole de la Défense civile a également signalé qu'il s'agissait de la deuxième fois que la ville de Saraqeb était touchée par un gaz toxique, ajoutant que neuf cas similaires présumés avaient été recensés dans la province d'Idlib.
Le 23 juin dernier, les combattants de Daesh ont également bombardé l’armée syrienne dans la province de Raqqa avec des bombes au gaz, selon la chaîne libanaise Al Mayadeen.
Fin 2015, l'Organisation pour l'interdiction des armes chimiques a confirmé que la moutarde de soufre, communément connu sous le nom de «gaz moutarde», avait été utilisée pour la première fois dans le conflit, sans être en mesure de confirmer l'identité du responsable de l'attaque.
Syrian officials
and all are coughing and have bloodshot eyes, say doctors
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A local police source told SANA that terrorist groups fired rocket shells on the al-Hamadaniyeh neighborhood, injuring six. They also targeted the Salah-Eddin neighborhood, killing two and injuring 11 more.
The Russian Reconciliation Centre in Syria said on Tuesday evening in a statement that Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) and Al-Nusra Front terrorists were continuing to shell residential areas in Aleppo and Damascus.
“During the day in the province of Aleppo, terrorists fired mortars at the town of Ansar and two heights in the surrounding area, [and the] neighborhoods [of] Hai al-Ansari, Leramon, al- Khalidia and a shopping center "Castello" in the city of Aleppo were also targeted,” the statement reads.
The violence comes amid a dire humanitarian crisis in Aleppo which “is on the verge of running out of food and other essential supplies,” a recent statement by Amnesty International said.
Last week the Russian defense minister announced that “safe passages” would be created to let civilians flee the battle zone. Opposition fighters willing to “lay down arms” were also promised amnesty by Syrian government forces.
On Tuesday the Russian Center for Reconciliation in Syria dispatched a convoy containing 18 tons of aid to Aleppo from the Russian Khmeimim air base.
"Servicemen of the Russian center for Syrian reconciliation sent food and essentials in a humanitarian convoy to temporary storage warehouses in Aleppo," the statement said. The goods included personal hygiene equipment and medicine to be utilized by the ill or wounded.
On Monday a Russian Mi-8 transport helicopter was downed while coming back from a humanitarian aid mission to Aleppo. The incident happened as the chopper was flying over the neighboring Idlib province. Three crew members and two officers onboard died.
General Sergey Rudskoy, chief of the main operations department of the Russian General Staff said that terrorists from Al-Nusra Front but also forces seen as “moderate opposition” by Washington operate in the area.
Earlier on Tuesday, media reports suggested that toxic gas had been dispersed in the area where a Russian helicopter was shot down in Syria. Kremlin has said that it has no information on the issue adding that it’s not always clear what such claims are based on. The UN also said that it can’t confirm these reports.
Dozens ill after suspected chlorine attack in Syria
The attack, using a gas cylinder laced with chlorine, targeted the town of Saraqeb in Idlib province, which is under opposition control, and near where a Russian helicopter was shot down on Monday.
It came almost exactly a year after the UN security council adopted a resolution that set a 12 month-deadline to identify the perpetrators of chlorine attacks in Syria. The deadline expires next week.
“It is impossible to get used to this pain we see,” he added. “Impossible.”
The suspected chemical attack occurred against a backdrop of escalating warfare across Syria and particularly in the neighbouring province of Aleppo, where rebels have launched a wide-ranging offensive to break a weeks-long siege on the opposition-held east of the city.
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But chlorine is not banned under the terms of the treaty on the prohibition of chemical weapons, as it also has domestic and industrial uses such as water purification.Last year, medical workers said they had documented as many as 35 attacks that deployed chlorine between mid-March and May alone in Idlib, causing more than 1,000 injuries and nine deaths, including wounding civil defence workers.Assaad, the Saraqeb doctor, said recent airstrikes in the vicinity of his hospital had destroyed an extension built by aid groups that provided first aid treatment to chemical attack victims, disinfecting them before they entered the main hospital structure.“We used to have a sort of ‘chemical tent’ to separate the victims of chemical attacks and purify them before taking them to the hospital,” he said. “But there were a lot of bombings and all the buildings around the hospital are either destroyed or damaged, and the tent is gone as well.”Last week, the town’s local council said its blood bank and a first aid centre were both destroyed in airstrikes, the latest in what aid groups say is a systematic campaign against medical facilities.On Monday, the Russian defence ministry said a helicopter carrying five service members was shot down near Saraqeb, hours before the suspected chlorine attack. The entire crew were killed, in what was the single deadliest incident for Moscow’s troops since they intervened to shore up the Assad regime last October.