chemical weapons - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz Catholic News New Zealand Tue, 17 Apr 2018 09:59:16 +0000 en-NZ hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.1 https://cathnews.co.nz/wp-content/uploads/2020/05/cropped-cathnewsfavicon-32x32.jpg chemical weapons - CathNews New Zealand https://cathnews.co.nz 32 32 70145804 Five things you need to know about chemical weapons https://cathnews.co.nz/2018/04/19/five-things-about-chemical-weapons/ Thu, 19 Apr 2018 08:12:03 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=106035 chemical weapons

Five questions on chemical weapons with Johnny Nehme, a chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear expert at the International Committee of the Red Cross: In your view, why are chemical weapons banned? Their indiscriminate nature. They could kill or maim any person, whether that person is participating in a given conflict or not. A second issue is Read more

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Five questions on chemical weapons with Johnny Nehme, a chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear expert at the International Committee of the Red Cross:

In your view, why are chemical weapons banned?

Their indiscriminate nature.

They could kill or maim any person, whether that person is participating in a given conflict or not.

A second issue is that the effect of certain chemical weapons could bring lifelong damage that would remain after the conflict ends. To make and use a weapon that prevents people from using the air, from breathing, was considered too horrible and damaging.

When you see images of a person who has suffered a chemical weapons attack, what goes through your mind?

When I see a video or a picture, the first thing I think is that we cannot confirm anything.

What we can say is that the apparent signs or symptoms on this person could be consistent with persons contaminated with this kind of agent. But we cannot confirm anything.

Some of the symptoms could be similar to a natural pulmonary disease.

The only thing that allows us to confirm contamination by a chemical warfare agent is taking samples and analyzing them in the lab.

What's the brief history of chemical weapons?

For thousands of years soldiers poisoned water sources, wells, or arrow tips in order to harm the enemy. Arsenic has been used for thousands of years to poison and kill people. Toxic chemicals have been used to harm and kill people for a long time.

In our recent history, chemical weapons were deliberately used at a large scale in World War I.

The Battle of Ypres in Belgium is famous for this first chemical attack.

That was chlorine.

Since then specific chemical warfare agents have been produced until recent years even if it was decided by common understanding to prohibit their use since the Geneva Protocol on Asphyxiating or Poisonous Gases.

What do the different chemical weapons do to the body?

Let's look at chlorine.

The first thing is that chlorine itself is not a chemical weapon. It's a toxic industrial chemical that is very useful to purify water.

It's really very important to have clean water to avoid water borne diseases. But chlorine is a chemical agent that effects the eyes and the ability to breath.

When mixed with water it produces hydrochloride acid.

It's not a very efficient chemical weapon because we can sense it when it's not very toxic yet. So you can run away.

Using chlorine gas is not prohibited as such, but using chlorine gas as a weapon is prohibited.

Chemical warfare agents are classified in different categories depending on their effect.

We have the blistering agent such as mustard agent that is designed to induce blisters wherever it falls. It goes on micro droplets and it makes a chemical reaction with the skin or the moisture we have in the lungs, and the effect is a blister.

It's not meant to kill. It's meant to disable, normally the soldier.

In the eyes it would blind the person, in the lungs it would prevent him from breathing. It has a 5 percent kill rate.

And the idea behind it is just to maim a soldier and have five to six soldiers coming to help him, so it would reduce the capacity of that armed group.

The second category is nerve agents, like sarin, or VX.

These are nerve agents because they stop the activity of one enzyme associated with our muscles.

So all the muscles will cramp, including the lungs, or the muscles that are controlling them, so people die from suffocation.

The mortality rate is very high.

Like all chemical warfare agents, you cannot use sarin, you cannot store it; it's prohibited.

You also have blood agents like cyanide.

These prevent the cell respiration. It blocks the function of the cell. The mortality rate is very high. It's an effective killer.

Chemical warfare agents are designed specifically to not be detected by our senses.

We can't see them, we can't smell them, so you don't run away.

Their toxicity is high enough that they have bad effects on your health before you start feeling it. And all of them have a density that is higher than air so they settle in basements and trenches, as they are designed to kill or maim soldiers in trenches.

Some are persistent, which means when they fall on the body, hair, skin, clothes. They continue cross contaminating elsewhere, and it harms the soldiers trying to help the contaminated one, it harms the medical staff trying to help the victims.

What is your analysis of the landscape today? Is the same will that banned chemical weapons 100 years ago still there on a global scale?

This is a personal opinion.

I have the feeling that the increased use of toxic chemicals in conflict leads to the stigma diminishing.

What's useful militarily in a chemical, radiological or biological weapon attack is the fear effect.

It creates fear.

Even when you take a chlorine attack, for instance, the effect on victims is not that significant at scale compared to the effect of a conventional weapon, but the effect of it is everyone talks about it and it's feared.

So I'd say the will of banning the use of chemical weapons is still the same, because everyone still thinks they are horrible.

At the same time you have more people with chemical skills.

It's very easy to produce some chemical agents, and the fear effect it produces is powerful.

  • Johnny Nehme holds a PhD in biomedical science from the University of Paris. Before joining the International Committee of the Red Cross, he worked for the Atomic Energy Commission, where he studied the effect of radiation on blood cells. Earlier in life he worked as a paramedic for the French Red Cross.
  • First published by the International Committee of the Red Cross. Reprinted with permission.
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Pope Francis and Syrian Patriarchs react to airstrikes https://cathnews.co.nz/2018/04/16/pop%c2%ade-syria-patriarchs-airstrikes/ Mon, 16 Apr 2018 08:09:54 +0000 https://cathnews.co.nz/?p=105997

Church leaders including Pope Francis and the Syrian Patriarchs are condemning last weekend's airstrikes by the United States (US), Britain and France. War planes and ships launched over 100 missiles at three chemical weapons storage and research facilities near Damascus and Homs. The airstrikes sought to punish President Bashar al-Assad for a suspected chemical attack Read more

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Church leaders including Pope Francis and the Syrian Patriarchs are condemning last weekend's airstrikes by the United States (US), Britain and France.

War planes and ships launched over 100 missiles at three chemical weapons storage and research facilities near Damascus and Homs.

The airstrikes sought to punish President Bashar al-Assad for a suspected chemical attack in the rebel-held suburb of Douma, east of Damascus, on 7 April.

Forty-two people died in the attack.

According to the Pentagon, the airstrikes aimed to take "the heart out of" of President Bashar Assad's chemical weapons programme.

They say the strikes targeted a research centre in Damascus, along with a chemical weapons storage facility and command post west of Homs.

At the same time, the Pentagon acknowledges the Syrian government can probably still attack with chemical agents.

In a joint statement, the Greek Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch and all the East, the Syrian Orthodox Patriarch of Antioch and all the East, the Melkite-Greek Catholic Patriarch of Antioch, Alexandria and Jerusalem have denounced the strikes.

Their statement says they condemn "the brutal aggression that took place [during the weekend] against our precious country … under the allegations that the Syrian government has used chemical weapons."

They say the airstrikes are a "clear violation of the international laws and the UN Charter", and described them as an "unjustified assault" on a sovereign country that is a member of the UN.

"It causes us great pain that this assault comes from powerful countries to which Syria did not cause any harm in any way.

"The allegations of the USA and other countries that the Syrian army is using chemical weapons and that Syria is a country that owns and uses this kind of weapon is a claim that is unjustified and unsupported by sufficient and clear evidence."

Pope Francis has called for peace in the region.

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Footage of chemical attack in Syria is fraud https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/09/10/footage-chemical-attack-syria-fraud/ Mon, 09 Sep 2013 19:30:28 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=49420

There is proof the footage of the alleged chemical attack in Syria was fabricated, Mother Agnes Mariam el-Salib, mother superior of St. James Monastery in Qara, Syria, told RT. She says she is about to submit her findings to the UN. Mother Agnes, a catholic nun, who has been living in Syria for 20 years Read more

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There is proof the footage of the alleged chemical attack in Syria was fabricated, Mother Agnes Mariam el-Salib, mother superior of St. James Monastery in Qara, Syria, told RT.

She says she is about to submit her findings to the UN.

Mother Agnes, a catholic nun, who has been living in Syria for 20 years and has been reporting actively on what has been going on in the war-ravaged country, says she carefully studied the video featuring allegedly victims of the chemical weapons attack in the Syrian village of Guta in August and now questions its authenticity.

In her interview with RT, Mother Agnes doubts so much footage could have been taken in so little time, and asks where parents of the supposedly dead children are. She promises to send her report to the UN.

The nun is indignant with the world media for apparently turning a blind eye to the Latakia massacre by rebel extremists, which left 500 civilians including women and children dead.

Russia's Foreign Ministry has called on the international community to pay attention to revelations made by Mother Agnes Mariam el-Salib. Continue reading the interview with Mother Agnes

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Arab spring a nightmare for Syrian Christians https://cathnews.co.nz/2013/08/06/arab-spring-a-nightmare-for-syrian-christians/ Mon, 05 Aug 2013 19:13:36 +0000 http://cathnews.co.nz/?p=48052

Now that Syria is in shambles—with an estimated 93,000 dead, 1.5 million refugees, and 4.5 million internally displaced; ancient churches torched, destroyed, or vandalized; Christians targeted for murder and kidnapping and even used as human shields—now the mainstream media is starting to admit that, yes, the rebel forces appear to include quite a few Islamist Read more

Arab spring a nightmare for Syrian Christians... Read more]]>
Now that Syria is in shambles—with an estimated 93,000 dead, 1.5 million refugees, and 4.5 million internally displaced; ancient churches torched, destroyed, or vandalized; Christians targeted for murder and kidnapping and even used as human shields—now the mainstream media is starting to admit that, yes, the rebel forces appear to include quite a few Islamist guerrillas. Now that even chemical warfare has made its appearance, with Carla Del Ponte, a member of the International Commission of Inquiry on Syria, confirming that "the chemical weapons are being used by the rebels, not the men faithful to Bashar al Assad"; now that clergy are being kidnapped, with still no word of kidnapped bishops Yohanna Ibrahim and Boulos Yazigi and with the beheading of a cleric by Islamist rebels available on YouTube for all to see—now the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights has started including some jihadist rebel atrocities in their reports.

Now that women are having to cover up with the abaya, or at least keep a veil handy when they venture out, just in case (something previously inconceivable in Syria), now the press is reporting the establishment of sharia courts which, according to the Washington Post, pass sentences "daily and indiscriminately" on Christians and anyone else who violates precepts of Wahhabi Islam.

Now that the economy has been brought to its knees by the widespread destruction and looting of stores and workshops; now that famine is at hand in the city of Aleppo, and foodstuffs are to be had only at enormous prices; now that the terrorists have reached Homs and Aleppo and the mountains above Damascus—now at last the press seems to have stopped describing the rebels' fight as a high-minded struggle for "freedom."

Syrian culture used to be distinctive among the lands of the Middle East for a coexistence between Christians and Muslims which went beyond mere tolerant forbearance, a reality of which Syrians were proud. Under the iron fist of the ruling Alawite dictators, who kept fundamentalists at bay, a good degree of religious freedom was preserved. Christians fleeing persecution in other Middle East countries found refuge in Assad's Syria, including Iraqi Catholics fleeing post-Saddam persecution. Continue reading

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