BEIRUT: Six civilians suffered breathing difficulties and other symptoms indicative of poison gas inhalation after an attack launched by Turkey on the Kurdish-controlled enclave of Afrin, Syrian Kurdish news outlets and Syria鈥檚 state-run news agency reported Saturday.
The news outlets quoted local doctors in Afrin as saying the hospital treated six cases of people who suffered shortness of breath, vomiting and skin rashes. The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights monitoring group also quoted local doctors in its report.
The claims could not be independently confirmed, and videos released from the hospital showed people being fitted with oxygen masks who did not otherwise show symptoms of gas attack inhalation such as twitching, foaming at the mouth or vomiting.
SANA on Saturday said Turkey fired several shells containing 鈥渢oxic substances鈥� on a village in Afrin on Friday night, causing six civilians to suffer suffocation symptoms.
The Turkish military repeated in a weekly statement published Saturday that it does not use internationally 鈥渂anned ammunition鈥� in its Afrin operation and said, 鈥渢he Turkish Armed Forces does not keep such ammunition in its inventory.鈥�
The army also said it is careful to not harm civilians and only targets 鈥渢errorists鈥� and their positions in the Afrin region.
A Turkish diplomatic source said that Turkey never used chemical weapons in its operations in Syria, and takes the utmost care of civilians.
鈥淭hese are baseless accusations. Turkey never used chemical weapons. We take utmost care about civilians in Operation Olive Branch,鈥� the source said.
The source also described the accusations of wounding six civilians through a suspected gas attack as 鈥渂lack propaganda.鈥�
The Turkish military launched an aerial and ground offensive on Afrin, in northwestern Syria, on Jan. 20. It says the aim of the operation is to push out the Kurdish militia known as the People鈥檚 Protection Units, or YPG, from the enclave. Turkey considers the group to be a terrorist group and an extension of the Kurdish insurgents it fights inside Turkey.
SANA, as well as Kurdish news outlets including Kurdistan 24, quoted doctor Khalil Sabri at the Afrin hospital as saying the attack occurred on the village of Aranda and that victims suffered shortness of breath, skin rashes, vomiting and low blood pressure.