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Home A Syrian family tells the story of the terrifying 2013 chemical assault close to Damascus.
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A Syrian family tells the story of the terrifying 2013 chemical assault close to Damascus.

    A Syrian family recounts the horrors of the 2013 chemical attack near Damascus
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    Published on 26 December 2024
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    BBC Gossip

    ZAMALKA – A Syrian family, known as the Arbeenis, survived a chemical weapons attack in 2013 near Damascus, the Syrian capital, where hundreds of people lost their lives. The family reveals that the horrifying experience continues to haunt them to this day.

    The attack, which occurred on Aug. 21, 2013, specifically targeted various suburbs of Damascus, including Zamalka, the neighborhood where the Arbeeni family resides. The responsibility for the attack was pinned on the government forces under then-President Bashar Assad’s regime.

    Recalling the terrifying events, the Arbeeni family recounts how they sought refuge in a windowless room within their house, remaining hidden for hours. By doing so, they managed to survive while sadly, many of their neighbors fell victim to one of the most disastrous incidents of the Syrian civil war.

    The gas that was used — sarin, an extremely toxic nerve agent — can kill in minutes.

    The Syrian government denied it was behind the attack and blamed opposition fighters, an accusation the opposition rejected as Assad’s forces were the only side in the brutal civil war to posses sarin. The United States subsequently threatened military retaliation, with then-President Barack Obama saying Assad’s use of chemical weapons would be Washington’s “red line.”

    “It was a horrifying night,” Hussein Arbeeni, 41, told The Associated Press on Wednesday.

    The surface-to-surface missiles fell close to his family’s home without exploding, instead leaking the poisonous gas. Shortly after that, he says the family members had difficulties breathing, their eyes started to ache and they hearts beat faster and faster.

    Arbeeni, his parents, his siblings and their families, as well as a neighbor — 23 people in all — rushed into the only room in their home without windows and closed the door.

    He says he taped all around the door, soaked some clothes in water and rolled them up under the door to prevent the gas from coming in. “I even taped the key hole,” he said.

    A few months earlier, Arbeeni said, the local first responders of the Syrian Civil Defense, also known as White Helmets, had instructed residents in the opposition-held suburbs of Damascus what to do in case of a chemical attack.

    He remembers them saying they should cover their nose and mouth with a cloth soaked in water with white vinegar, and breathe through that.

    They huddled for three hours inside the room — time that seemed endless that night. Outside, many people were dying.

    “It is all because of God and this locked room,” Arbeeni says of their survival.

    Around daybreak, the White Helmets members rushed into their house, found the family inside the room on the ground floor and told them to leave the area immediately.

    They ran into the street and saw dead bodies lying all around. A passing truck took the family on and gave them a ride. Their neighbor, who had fainted from the shock of the horrific scene, was taken away by paramedics.

    “I was scared to look,” said Arbeeni’s mother, Khadija Dabbas, 66.

    The family stayed for a few weeks some miles away from Zamalka but then came back.

    Despite Obama’s threat, in the end, Washington settled for a deal with Moscow for Russia-backed Assad to give up his chemical weapons’ stockpile.

    But Assad’s government was widely believed to have kept some of the weapons and was accused of using them again — including a 2018 chlorine gas attack over Douma, another Damascus suburb, that killed 43 people.

    Today, Arbeeni — remembering all the neighbors, friends and townspeople who perished — says he wants the “harshest punishment” for those behind the attack in Zamalka.

    “All those children and innocent people who were killed should get justice,” he said, looking at his 12-year-old son, Laith, a baby at the time of the attack.

    The new authorities in Syria are led by the jihadi group Hayat Tahrir al-Sham, or HTS, which late last month launched a stunning offensive from its northwestern stronghold that blitzed across large swaths of Syria and toppled Assad. They have vowed to bring to justice former Syrian government officials blamed for atrocities.

    But times are still unsettled — a few short weeks after Assad’s ouster, no one knows what Syria’s future will look like.

    “The overthrow of the Assad government creates the possibility of justice for thousands of victims of atrocities, including those killed by chemical and other banned weapons,” says Adam Coogle, deputy director with the Middle East and North Africa division at Human Rights Watch.

    “But justice will only happen if the new authorities prioritize it and urgently act to preserve evidence,” Coogle added. He urged for immediate access for U.N. agencies and international experts who would create a comprehensive plan to ensure that Syrians can seek justice and accountability.

    On Wednesday, about a dozen people visited the Martyrs Cemetery in Zamalka and the graves of people from the area killed during Syria’s nearly 14-year war.

    Arbeeni’s brother, Hassan, pointed to part of the cemetery that holds a mass grave. There are no names of the dead there, only a sign in Arabic that reads: “August 2013.”

    “The martyrs of the chemical attack are here,” Hassan said, and recited a Muslim prayer for the dead.

    Copyright 2024 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed without permission.

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