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Syrian snipers target pregnant women

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Syrian snipers target pregnant women, unborn babies, doctor says


By Atika Shubert and Bharati Naik, CNN
October 23, 2013 -- Updated 1150 GMT (1950 HKT)




(CNN) --
An X-ray shows a bullet lodged in a baby's head. The image would be chilling enough without knowing the child was still in its mother's womb when it became the target of snipers hiding in the shadows in northern Syria.

The mother survived. Her baby didn't. And it's not the only one.

Volunteer doctor David Nott, a British surgeon who's worked in several Syrian hospitals with the charity Syria Relief, says snipers are playing a "targeting game," and heavily pregnant women are on the hit list.

"Most of the children removed were seven, eight, nine months gestation, which meant it was fairly obvious to anybody that these women were pregnant."

Young children are also being targeted, Nott said.

Photos provided to CNN by Syria Relief show a young girl with painted nails lying in a hospital bed with head wounds. She appears no more than five years old. Another, around the same age, lies under a green sheet with a gaping wound to her forehead.

Nott said 90% of surgeries he performed on any given day were for sniper wounds.

On some days, the wounds were suspiciously similar.

"After a while we noticed that there were certain trends going on," Nott said.

"We had some days, say, 10 or 15 gunshot wounds of which eight or nine of them were targeted in one particular area. So for example, one day, we received say 15, 16 gunshot wounds and of that eight to nine were targeted in the left groin only.

"Then the following day they were targeted in the right groin only. So it seemed to me like there was some of thing going on -- a game going on -- between the snipers."

Knott said other local doctors he worked with told him they'd heard snipers were receiving little presents -- like packets of cigarettes -- for people they'd shot during the day.


Desperate dash for supplies

In video obtained by CNN from Aleppo, men, women and children try to outrun snipers' bullets as they cross from the regime-controlled enclave of the city to rebel-held areas.

They risk their lives because food and provisions are on the rebel side. But their homes and families are on the regime side. Desperate, they make a dash for supplies. Not everyone makes it through.

It is a scene reminiscent of another conflict: Bosnia. Its capital, Sarajevo, was literally under siege from snipers of the Bosnian Serb Army for more than four years.

But during that war in the early 1990s, the United Nations operated humanitarian corridors to ensure that, despite the fighting, aid still got through.

Nott also volunteered in Bosnia and described his relief back then at seeing extra supplies trucked in.

"It was wonderful to see the lorries coming in with UNHCR written on them. And when you saw one of them, you knew that that they were filled with food, provisions and medical aid for the besieged town."

He says Syria desperately needs the same.

"Now is the time to develop a humanitarian corridor to allow health and aid workers to go in, and not feel threatened on the way in and not feel threatened on the way out," he said.

"I felt very scared going in and coming out and this isn't right."


CNN
 
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Man, go tell your suicide bombers not to kill babies and gtfo with this propaganda.

What bombers are you talking about? This is a CNN report, it isn't one-sided " propaganda "


On other note, maybe you should tell your people to stop sticking the knives at their throats :lol:
 
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Like the Ghouta massacre with the kidnapped alawite children?

It's the israelis who bomb with cluster bombs, phosphorus shells, who target pregnant women and the children
Nothing amazing that they always accuse the SAA they are experts at deceiving people

IDF-SNIPER-TEES.jpg


Israeli soldier post on Instagram a picture of a palestinian kid in his crosshair

scope19n-1-web.jpg
 
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What bombers are you talking about? This is a CNN report, it isn't one-sided " propaganda "


On other note, maybe you should tell your people to stop sticking the knives at their throats :lol:

It’s your people that are beheading everyone, & yes it’s used as 1 sided propaganda by bubblegum.

What bombers are you talking about? This is a CNN report, it isn't one-sided " propaganda "


On other note, maybe you should tell your people to stop sticking the knives at their throats :lol:

It’s your people that are beheading everyone, & yes it’s used as 1 sided propaganda by bubblegum.
 
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Man, go tell your suicide bombers not to kill babies and gtfo with this propaganda.

the doctor in French TV said that both sides make "competition" and fun to kill pregnant women
more the baby is aged more they bet money

remember a movie (based on true story) where a serbian is enjoying killing (sniper) for fun people in street ?

human beings my friend are able of the worst
 
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the doctor in French TV said that both sides make "competition" and fun to kill pregnant women
more the baby is aged more they bet money

...

Lie.

Prove it. Source.

Syrian snipers of Assad only - Alawite with help Shiia of Iran and Irak, Hezbollashiitan -. It's clear.
 
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Does it really matter that much if killed by sniper or by bomb ?

The "Islamic" forces are specialized in suicide bombs.
 
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Me? Well, these folks are no different than Hezbollah or Al-Mahdi brigade or Abu Fadel Al-Abbas or Al-Qaida.

These folks are the ones ruling Eastern Syria, theres no FSA moderate joke group anymore except in Istanbul.
 
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Quote 2 :

Assad regime snipers 'targeting unborn babies'

Snipers belonging to the Assad regime in Syria are shooting pregnant women and their unborn babies in a disturbing “game” of target practice, a British surgeon has claimed

By Bonnie Malkin, and Ruth Sherlock in Beirut
3:18PM BST 19 Oct 2013



David Nott, who has spent five weeks volunteering in a Syrian hospital, said each day snipers would chose to aim at different parts of the civilians' bodies as they ran from one part of the city to another to buy food and supplies.

One day it would be the groin, one day it would be the neck, the next it would be the chest, he told The Times.

“From the first patients that came in in the morning, you could almost tell what you would see for the rest of the day. It was a game. We heard the snipers were winning packets of cigarettes for hitting the correct number of targets.”

On one day more than six pregnant women were caught by sniper fire and on another day two heavily pregnant women were targeted. They survived but their unborn babies died, one suffering a bullet to the brain.

“The women were all shot through the uterus, so that must have been where they were aiming for... This was deliberate. It was hell beyond hell,” he told the paper.

Mr Nott, who has been volunteering in war zones including Bosnia, Libya and Sudan for 20 years, said at times, he found it difficult to cope with.

Speaking on Radio Four's Today programme on Saturday morning, he said: "I can't explain how horrendous the whole thing is."

Mr Nott, who said he could not reveal the location of the hospital in which he was working, said he could not be certain which side the snipers were on but believed the were on the side of President Bashar al-Assad’s regime. He said he was told there were 72 snipers in total in the area, who were picking off civilians as they tried to cross from one city to another to fetch food.

"I was there for five weeks and I was exhausted at the end of it,” he said.

Pictures showing an x-ray purportedly of a foetus with a bullet lodged in its skull were provided by charity Syria Relief. Their authenticity could not be verified and the skull in the image showed no sign of damage from a high velocity bullet.

Mr Nott has recently returned from Syria, which he described as the most desperate of all war zones and the first place he had seen civilians, and especially pregnant women, being targeted. Mr Nott estimated that 90 per cent of the people he treated were civilians.

He also described terrible conditions in Syrian hospitals that lacked even basic supplies and hygiene equipment. He said local doctors worked under the threat of violence and some suffered from depression but were not willing to abandon their patients.

A vascular surgeon at Chelsea and Westminster Hospital who had volunteered in Syria before, Mr Nott said he saw little to no evidence of foreign aid reaching the places that badly needed it.

His grim account of life in Syria came as a military intelligence officer in President Bashar al-Assad’s regime was killed by opposition rebels.

Gen Jama’a Jama’a, the head of the Syrian military intelligence for the north-east of the country, was shot dead by snipers on Thursday during a battle with rebel groups, including men linked to al-Qaeda in Deir Ezzor.

Gen Jama’a was “martyred while carrying out his national duties to defend Syria and its people and pursuing terrorists in Deir Ezzor”, Syrian state television reported. His death, celebrated by rebels and opposition activists, severs one of the increasingly few ties of the regime to the north-east of the country.

In recent months much of Syria’s oil-producing Deir Ezzor province has fallen into the hands of opposition rebel groups.

Located close to the border with Iraq, and a prime smuggling route for fighters and weapons into Syria, the al-Qaeda-linked Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) and the Nusra Front have become powerful players in the area.

Gen Jama’a was appointed as the chief of intelligence in Deir Ezzor, a prominent and sensitive position, after serving a long and murky career for Assad’s regime.

The London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said that dozens of rebels and government soldiers have been killed in fighting in Deir Ezzor.

It said that rebels from the Nusra Front murdered 10 soldiers they captured in the Rashidiyah district, where Gen Jama’a was killed on Thursday.

Dozens of people, meanwhile, were killed in fighting in northern Aleppo province yesterday.


The Telegraph.co
 
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