The
Syrian government has been accused of using chlorine gas against the
Islamic State of the Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), the latest allegations
of chemical weapons use in the country’s bitter conflict.
The
Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said on Saturday that ISIL fighters
showed the effects of a
chlorine gas attack as government forces
repelled an offensive on a key air base in the country’s east.
The
UK-based watchdog, which opposes the government, said some the groups
fighters had breathing problems as they attempted to close in on the
strategic Deir Ezzor military airport.
Syrian
State TV quoted an unnamed military official as saying troops repelled
attempts by “terrorists” on several areas near the city of Deir Ezzor
and killed “tens of them and destroyed their vehicles and weapons.”
The
station later aired footage of Syrian troops standing near bodies of
dead fighters it said were ISIL members who were killed.
SOHR
said since ISIL launched their assault on Thursday, 51 of Assad’s
forces and 68 ISIL fighters had been killed, including two French
citizens.
One
of the last government-held areas in Deir Ezzor province, the outpost
is used by the regime to mount raids on ISIL positions in several areas
across the country.
ISIL controls most of Deir Ezzor province, but half the provincial capital remains in government hands.
The
oil-rich province lies between ISIL-controlled Raqqa province and the
border with Iraq, and is a key prize for ISIL which declared an
widely-unrecognised Islamic ‘caliphate’ straddling the two countries in
June.
--Punch News
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