A Syrian pro-government newspaper
reported Sunday that many soldiers battling rebels in a restive
neighborhood of the capital Damascus have shown symptoms of exposure to
chemical gas.
Citing a "well-informed" medical source,
al-Watan said that many soldiers were sent earlier this week to the
Hamish military hospital in Damascus, showing symptoms of inhaling
chemical gas after the rebels fired a bombshell at the troops in the
Brzeh neighborhood of the capital.
It said the symptoms include suffocation
and nausea, as well as the trickling of a kind of white liquid from the
victims' noses and mouths.
Stressing no official comments have been
made about the incident, the paper said that the competent authorities
started an investigation into the type of the gas.
Talks about Syria's chemical weapons
have flared up recently as the White House stated that the Syrian troops
may have used chemical weapons, mostly agent sarin, in its fight
against the rebels.
The Syrian government has dismissed such
claims and accused Washington and its western allies of stirring
accusations against Syria in order to set the stage of a possible
repetition of the Iraqi scenario.
Watan commented that the United States
was attempting to pressure the Syrian administration after sweeping
victories and advancement of the Syrian army against the rebels on
several fronts, most importantly in the outskirts of Damascus.
Last December, Syria warned that rebels
could use chemical weapons in their fight against President Bashar
al-Assad's forces, but insisted the government will never unleash such
arms on its own people.
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