From February 24-26, 2015, I joined a US delegation of 6 anti-war activists—including, notably, former Attorney General, Ramsey Clark, as well as former US Congresswoman Cynthia McKinney and long-time anti-war advocate Sara Flounders, of the International Action Center—in a solidarity visit to Damascus.
During our two days, we met with a number of important Syrian voices, including: Dr. Bouthaina Shaaban, Political & Media Advisor to President al-Assad; Ministers of Information and Justice; Vice Minister of Foreign Affairs; President of the (independent) BAR association; Syria’s Grand Mufti, Sheikh Ahmad Badreddin Hassoun, and leaders within the PFLP based in Syria.
However, on the human level, one important visit was that of the tour of Damascus’ largest hospital, University Hospital, where victims of terrorist rocket and mortar attacks were being treated. Following is an account of what we saw and heard. At the end, I’ve included notes from my June 2014 article, The Terrorism We Support in Syria: A First-hand Account of the Use of Mortars against Civilians
University Hospital: A young doctor—who I will call “Rana” as I didn’t get her name—tours our delegation through the University Hospital’s 15 bed ICU, explaining the different cases as we go. “We receive here only civilians, civilians who have suffered some sort of shrapnel or bombing injury and who need intensive care after surgery. They come from the suburbs of Damascus, mostly from up to 10 kms away. Patients stay here from 6 days up to a month.”
Delegate’s Question: “So that means there are explosions taking place that close to this location.”
Answer: “Yes.”
Me: “Do they tend to be mortars, from Douma or somewhere?”
Older Doctor: “Ok. Exactly!”
Rana speaks of 4 of the injured patients. “One of them was discharged today, and three of them are still here in the intensive care. Three of them are siblings,” she repeats. They suffer different shrapnel injuries, after a mortar hit near their house four days prior, a doctor, Ali, explains to me. At the bed of the first injured child, the female doctor explains, “Both her legs and her hands are injured. There is a fragment inside her brain. She had surgery, and now she is in the intensive care.”
“Her situation is very dangerous,” an older nurse says. “She could be dead any minute,” Rana says. “This is her mother,” she gestures to a young woman who wears the face of so many Palestinian mothers I’ve seen before. “Three of her children were injured.” Me: “Where did the bomb come from?” Ali: “From Douma.” He doesn’t bother to add that the only armed persons who could have fired this are the terrorists who have been raining mortars and rockets from Douma all around, including on Damascus. Me: “Mortar or…?” Ali: “Mortar.” I walk up to the next bed and hear Rana say, “Her baby, the infant, is safe.” An older nurse tells me the girl is 18 years old, five months pregnant, arrived at the hospital 4 days ago, and has mortar shrapnel in her brain. It was approximately two hours before they reached a hospital, the female doctor said. “We received them and gave them emergency. Intensive,” Rana says. In another bed, the third child (a three year old)’s head is wrapped in bandaging. Her case is critical, Ali tells me. She lies still, her only movement from the mechanical ventilator. A 15 year old girl from al-Wafideen Camp, near Adra, (roughly 15 km NE of Damascus) lies with a bandaged head, her other injuries covered by a blanket. “She has shrapnel in her legs, chest and brain,” an older doctor explains. Her mother is in another bed.
“They live in Ghouta, but fled to al-Wafideen, and still got hit by explosives. …They fled from their home to a safer area, and this is what happened..,” the doctor says. Me: “Was she injured by mortar or rocket fire?” Doctor: “Rocket fire.” Me: “From where?” Doctor: “From Douma.”
In another room, a fourteen year old girl lies awake, her remaining eye open, the other ruined by shrapnel. Both legs are in casts, broken, and one hand is bandaged. I’m told she arrived 3 days prior, from Arihah, Idlib countryside, injured by a mortar blast. Her situation is critical, the female doctor says. Idlib is some hours to the north; the girl has been brought to Damascus because her case is so severe.
Another bed holds a 16 year old boy, part of his right leg amputated, shrapnel in his left. Another mortar injury. He’s from ad-Dumayr, roughly 30 km NE of Damascus, with Douma in between.
The last injured boy I see is another teen, one leg bandaged up to his pelvis, the other leg missing from that point, and bandaging over his stomach. He was attacked in al-Kiswah, roughly 20 km east of Damascus.
The word “injury” never suffices these sorts of life-altering mutilations.
“What you just saw was only a minor example of the many patients we’ve been receiving,” says Ali. “Some weeks ago, hundreds of rockets were fired on Damascus. Can you imagine the sound of 20 rockets at once. Something crazy.”
In another room, outside of the ICU, Ali points to a teen being drip-fed by an IV. He’s had a colostomy and will need this drip-feed for a month, Ali estimates, noting the cost is pricey: around $100/bag, and the teen will need at least one/day. Ali repeats what the doctors have said (and what most Syrians I’ve met have told me): his care and medicines are free, his family doesn’t have to pay.
As Ramsey Clark said earlier in the hospital visit, “That’s the way it ought to be.”
The elevator used by ambulances serving the hospital, reeks of stale blood. “No matter how much we wash it, we can’t get rid of the stench,” the older doctor tells me.
In a downstairs office, the doctors explain more about the hospital. It had 860 beds, 40 more were added 4 years ago, to cope with the growing emergency cases. A university hospital, there are 500 residents, and 210 specialists. It gets an average of 500 emergency patients daily, not all of whom are related to terror attacks.
While the hospital treats all that come for care, nonetheless—similar to Gaza, whose medical sector is in a far more (siege-and-bombing-manufactured) dire state—the hospitals around Syria lack certain medicines and machinery due to the long-suffered, criminal sanctions on Syria. Rana notes, “We have so many difficulties, to ensure that we have antibiotics, specialized medicines, maintenance of the equipment, its essential for the patients. Because of the sanctions, many parts are not available, we have difficulties obtaining them. We’ve substituted for those medicines missing, but they are not the same quality.”
[On the criminal sanctions on Syria, see http://endthesanctions.com/]
ON MORTARS AND PRIOR ATTACKS:
In June 2014, on Election Day, the West’s terrorists fired on polling stations around Syria, as well as targeting residential and commercial areas, in their bid to terrorize Syrians from voting. They failed, but nonetheless killed and maimed many innocent Syrians in the process. I wrote about these mortars and the Election Day attacks [The Terrorism We Support in Syria: A First-hand Account of the Use of Mortars against Civilians]. Following are excerpts:
“In the three month period of April, May and June 2014, terrorist-insurgents fired 994 mortars on Damascus and environs, 426 of which were fired in June. On June 3, Election Day in Syria, the terrorist-insurgents fired 151 shells on Damascus, killing 5 and maiming 33 Syrians…
Press TV updated: ‘…Syria’s official news agency SANA reported on Saturday that at least 39 people had lost their lives in the mortar attack on the election campaign rally in Syria’s southern city of Dara’a late on Thursday. According to the report, some 205 people were also wounded in the attack, while 14 of the injured are in critical condition.’
…On May 31, Press TV reported: ‘Twenty people have been killed in mortar attacks carried out by foreign-backed militants on Syria’s northwestern city of Aleppo. The militants fired 40 mortar shells on several neighborhoods of the flashpoint city, destroying many buildings.’”
…At the time (April & June 2014), Damascus was being intensely shelled by mortars, frequently in my vicinity, including just behind the hotel housing the Peace Delegation which I accompanied for the first week. This attack killed three civilians and one Syrian soldier. We saw some of the 60 plus children injured in the April 15 shelling of a school, not an isolated occasion, an attack which also killed one child. Mortars rained down at close-proximity on many occasions in different areas of the Old City where I had then found lodging.
Prior to and since then, other residential, civilian areas I’ve become familiar with have been incessantly-targeted… and none of those areas can be considered targets for a “revolution”—in other words, neither governmental nor military sites. The terrorists are intentionally targeting high-density civilian areas, and often take videos of themselves manufacturing, preparing and firing the mortar shells.
Bab Touma (Thomas Gate), Bab Sharqi (East Gate), and the Shagour area of the Old City have all been repeatedly-targeted, as have the commercial Shaalan district—particularly near the Dar al-Salaam school—and other areas of Damascus and environs, including Abasyeen, Dweilaa, Baramkeh, Jaramana, Yarmouk, and Mazzeh. These are areas housing shops, restaurants, homes, schools, hospitals and clinics, hotels, parks…and thus the victims are Syrian civilians, including children.
…One evening, I sat talking with a restaurant-owner near Bab Sharqi in the Old City. Abu Shadi, the restaurant owner, lamented the lack of tourists, due to the war on Syria, and spoke of his own close encounter with mortars. As we spoke, mortars were fired on different areas of the Old City, one of which roughly 50 metres from where we sat [LISTEN HERE].
…The genial hotel owner spoke one day about a friend of his killed a few days prior. ‘My friend was martyred by a mortar three days ago. He was a pharmacist…He was at Bab Touma at the time, walking on the street, and a mortar fell there. They want to burn Syria from within, want to leave these factions fighting each until Syria is burned down and Syria is bled-out.’
A university student I spoke with on a crowded Old City bus one morning commented on the formerly-popular market area, Midan, as the bus passed by. ‘People are afraid to come here now, because its so close to Yarmouk. Midan is safe, but people think that the terrorists in Yarmouk will fire mortars here. I used to go to Yarmouk all the time, but now, no way.’
Following an April 21 mortar attack on Bab Touma, which killed 2 and maimed 23, I spoke with shop employees who had been present at the time of the attack. An employee in a shoe shop said: ‘It was just after 3 pm, the area was packed with people. It happens a lot, a lot, a lot, …all the time. Shrapnel flew everywhere, little bits and pieces. In the last two weeks, around ten mortars have landed in this area. This isn’t a revolution. They’ve come from outside. Do you know how we were living? We had security, work… but, sorry, now…?’ In a clothing shop, an employee present at the time said: ‘“We were inside, heard the explosion, went outside and saw the dead lying on the ground. We get these mortars all the time…’
…according to the NDF soldier, it is the home-made mortars which are the dirtiest. ‘They are shells, made in local workshops. Inside them they pack broken glass, nails, and anything that will hurt whoever is hit by the debris. They put explosives in the centre of these shards. Then they add the tail end and explosives to propel the mortar. When the mortar explodes, the metal container is destroyed and becomes shrapnel pieces which, along with the glass and nails, causes more extensive injuries.
The US mortars are stronger, intended for infantry. But the terrorists are using them as well. They won’t cause much damage to buildings, but they can maim and kill a lot of people. The terrorists can’t enter the city, so they’re trying to stop daily life by firing mortars on the city. They’ve been very open about their reasons for firing mortars on Damascus and other areas: they are punishing the Syrians who do not support their ‘revolution’. They say if you are living in an area controlled by the army and government of Syria, so you are against the ‘revolution’ and they are going to attack you, they say that it is halal (permitted by Islam) to kill you. Mortars are routinely fired from Jobar, about 1.5 km from here (central Damascus). The main group there is the Nusra Front, though there are also some members of so-called Free Syrian Army (FSA). Some of the armed men were trying a while ago to surrender to the government, but when they would try, they’d get a sniper’s bullet to the head from the other terrorists. There are so many civilians not involved in these attacks, so the army can’t fully attack Jobar with heavy weapons.’…”
*** Since then, Jobar has been largely liberated, but with terrorists in Douma, just east of Damascus, mortar and rocket attacks continue.
The “Army of Islam’s” leader, Saudi-asset Zahran Alloush, had (until Twitter finally blocked him) tweeted his threats to bombard Damascus with rockets and mortars, and bragged about such terrorist acts after the fact. On Feb 7 he tweeted: “Hundreds of rockets pound regime positions in Damascus.” On Jan 26 he tweeted: “We hit the regime in Damascus with 100 rockets…”
More recently, on Feb 12 Al Akhbar reported on an Al Jazeera interview with Alloush, citing him as threatening “that his future attacks will be carried out in the form of ‘600 to 1,000 rockets and mortar shells in a single hit…’” The man who corporate media like the BBC and Al Jazeera have interviewed and attempted to humanize (much like they did with the “moderate” organ-eating al-Farouq Brigade “Abu Sakkar,”) did not target Syrian government positions, he targeted residential and commercial areas in Damascus and its countryside.
The victims in University Hospital the day we visited—a mere fraction of the endless injured and martyred Syrians by such terrorist attacks not only in Damascus and environs, but also in Latakia, Aleppo and elsewhere in Syria—are testimony to this terrorism.
The average reader might question why the MSM hasn’t reported on these victims, this terrorism. The sad reality is that the corporate and Gulf media serve the US-NATO-Zionist-Gulf-Turkish terror agenda.
Which is why these mortar and rocket victims stories need to be seen, heard and shared.
Reblogged this on thewallwillfall.
Reblogged this on Will the real reality please stand up!.
[…] victims of the Zionist ideology and their collaborative scheming. Below follows excerpts from my previously-published account of the visit to Damascus’ largest hospital, University Hospital, where victims of terrorist […]
[…] On two different occasions I’ve visited injured Syrians–including many children–in hospitals. These would be victims of terrorist mortars on residential areas of Damascus and environs and on schools, as in the April 2014 mortar attack on Manar school, killing one child and injuring over 60 [see: children injured by “rebel” shelling of Manar school, Damascus & University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism]. […]
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[…] year old girl critically-injured by terrorist mortar and rocket attacks (photo from my Feb 2015 visit to University Hospital in […]
[…] year old girl critically-injured by terrorist mortar and rocket attacks (photo from my Feb 2015 visit to University Hospital in […]
[…] year old girl critically-injured by terrorist mortar and rocket attacks (photo from myFeb 2015 visit to University Hospital in […]
[…] Manar school were being treated for mild to severe injuries. On another visit, in Damascus, I visited the University Hospital, where children, women and men were being treated for injuries from mortars and missiles fired by […]
[…] Manar school were being treated for mild to severe injuries. On another visit, in Damascus, I visited the University Hospital, where children, women and men were being treated for injuries from mortars and missiles fired by […]
[…] Manar school were being treated for mild to severe injuries. On another visit, in Damascus, I visited the University Hospital, where children, women and men were being treated for injuries from mortars and missiles fired by […]
[…] Manar school were being treated for mild to severe injuries. On another visit, in Damascus, I visited the University Hospital, where children, women and men were being treated for injuries from mortars and missiles fired by […]
[…] Manar school were being treated for mild to severe injuries. On another visit, in Damascus, I visited the University Hospital, where children, women and men were being treated for injuries from mortars and missiles fired by […]
[…] estaban siendo tratados por lesiones que iban de leves a severas. En otra visita, en Damasco, visité el Hospital Universitario, donde niños, mujeres y hombres estaban siendo tratados por heridas de morteros y misiles […]
[…] Manar school were being treated for mild to severe injuries. On another visit, in Damascus, I visited the University Hospital, where children, women and men were being treated for injuries from mortars and missiles fired by […]
[…] Manar school were being treated for mild to severe injuries. On another visit, in Damascus, I visited the University Hospital, where children, women and men were being treated for injuries from mortars and missiles fired by […]
[…] Manar school were being treated for mild to severe injuries. On another visit, in Damascus, I visited the University Hospital, where children, women and men were being treated for injuries from mortars and missiles fired by […]
[…] Manar school were being treated for mild to severe injuries. On another visit, in Damascus, I visited the University Hospital, where children, women and men were being treated for injuries from mortars and missiles fired by […]
[…] Manar school were being treated for mild to severe injuries. On another visit, in Damascus, I visited the University Hospital, where children, women and men were being treated for injuries from mortars and missiles fired by […]
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[…] many of whom will likely add to the number of martyred in coming days (For example, see: University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism, from Feb 2015 visit to […]
[…] many of whom will likely add to the number of martyred in coming days [For example, see: University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism, from Feb 2015 visit to […]
[…] many of whom will likely add to the number of martyred in coming days [For example, see: University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism, from Feb 2015 visit to […]
[…] –University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism [photos… […]
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[…] many of whom will likely add to the number of martyred in coming days [For example, see: University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism, from Feb 2015 visit to […]
[…] -University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism, Mar 3, 2015, In Gaza […]
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[…] Manar school were being treated for mild to severe injuries. On another visit, in Damascus, I visited the University Hospital, where children, women and men were being treated for injuries from mortars and missiles fired by […]
[…] and maiming indiscriminately, leaving civilians, including children, with critical injuries and amputations. […]
[…] and maiming indiscriminately, leaving civilians, including children, with critical injuries and amputations. […]
[…] indistinctement , laissant lescivils, y compris les enfants, avec des blessures graves et des amputations […]
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[…] On prior visits to Damascus, staying in the Old City, the sound of mortars being fired from terrorist-held districts outside of the city was a constant. In recent months, the mortars on Damascus have stopped. Previously, Jebhat al-Nusra (Al Qaeda in Syria), Jaysh al-Islam and the Free Syrian Army, among other terrorist factions, rained mortars daily on residential areas of Damascus, hitting schools, homes, vehicles and pedestrians, killing and maiming indiscriminately, leaving civilians, including children, with critical injuries and amputations. […]
[…] Damascus, Eva Bartlett — On prior visits to Damascus, staying in the Old City, the sound of mortars being fired from terrorist-held districts outside of the city was a constant. In recent months, the mortars on Damascus have stopped. Previously, Jebhat al-Nusra (Al Qaeda in Syria), Jaysh al-Islam and the Free Syrian Army, among other terrorist factions, rained mortars daily on residential areas of Damascus, hitting schools, homes, vehicles and pedestrians, killing and maiming indiscriminately, leaving civilians, including children, with critical injuries and amputations. […]
[…] Damascus — On prior visits to Damascus, staying in the Old City, the sound of mortars being fired from terrorist-held districts outside of the city was a constant. In recent months, the mortars on Damascus have stopped. Previously, Jebhat al-Nusra (Al Qaeda in Syria), Jaysh al-Islam and the Free Syrian Army, among other terrorist factions, rained mortars daily on residential areas of Damascus, hitting schools, homes, vehicles and pedestrians, killing and maiming indiscriminately, leaving civilians, including children, with critical injuries and amputations. […]
[…] of blood. While the media reports I’ve seen have varied (some saying 5 have been murdered and others saying 8 victims) the employees said 11 were killed, including the 7 year old son of one of the restaurant managers, […]
[…] While the media reports I’ve seen have varied (early reports saying five had been murdered and others saying eight victims) the employees said eleven civilians were killed, including the 7 year old son of one of the […]
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[…] civilian areas. These maimed children were a sampling of the injured (some critically so) when I visited Damascus’ University Hospital in February 2015. These children were injured in April 2014, when militants mortared their school […]
[…] civilian areas. These maimed children were a sampling of the injured (some critically so) when I visited Damascus’ University Hospital in February 2015. These children were injured in April 2014, when militants mortared their school […]
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[…] alliance over the years will be respected or recognized by the Western press, be they women and children victims of rocket attacks, sniping and mortar terrorism in and around Damascus; Syrian and allied journalists assassinated by […]
[…] alliance over the years will be respected or recognized by the Western press, be they women and children victims of rocket attacks, sniping and mortar terrorism in and around Damascus; Syrian and allied journalists assassinated by […]
[…] alliance over the years will be respected or recognized by the Western press, be they women and children victims of rocket attacks, sniping and mortar terrorism in and around Damascus; Syrian and allied journalists assassinated by […]
[…] alliance over the years will be respected or recognized by the Western press, be they women and children victims of rocket attacks, sniping and mortar terrorism in and around Damascus; Syrian and allied journalists assassinated by […]
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[…] alliance over the years will be respected or recognized by the Western press, be they women and children victims of rocket attacks, sniping and mortar terrorism in and around Damascus; Syrian and allied journalists assassinated by […]
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[…] hospital children injured by terrorist attacks https://ingaza.wordpress.com/2015/03/03/university-hospital-damascus-meeting-victims-of-western-back… -mortar terrorism […]
[…] –University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism (Februa… […]
[…] University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism https://ingaza.wordpress.com/2015/03/03/university-hospital-damascus-meeting-victims-of-western-back… Terrorists’ Attack on Damascus Restaurant and Homes: “They have no humanity and no respect […]
[…] –University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism (Februa… […]
[…] and maiming indiscriminately, leaving civilians, including children, with critical injuries and amputations. […]
[…] on Damascus [2014] children injured by “rebel” shelling of Manar school, Damascus [2014] University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism [2015] UN Feigns Outrage Over Ghouta While Terrorist Rockets Rain Down on Damascus [2018] A […]
[…] on Damascus [2014] children injured by “rebel” shelling of Manar school, Damascus [2014] University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism [2015] UN Feigns Outrage Over Ghouta While Terrorist Rockets Rain Down on Damascus [2018] A […]
[…] on Damascus [2014] children injured by “rebel” shelling of Manar school, Damascus [2014] University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism [2015] On the terrorist mortar attack on Qamar al-Sham restaurant which killed at least 10, […]
[…] 2015, visiting Damascus’ University Hospital, where bed after bed was occupied by a child maimed by terrorists’ shelling (from Ghouta), a […]
[…] 2015, visiting Damascus’ University Hospital, where bed after bed was occupied by a child maimed by terrorists’ shelling (from Ghouta), a […]
[…] 2015, visiting Damascus’ University Hospital, where bed after bed was occupied by a child maimed by terrorists’ shelling (from Ghouta), a […]
[…] 2015, visiting Damascus’ University Hospital, where bed after bed was occupied by a child maimed by terrorists’ shelling (from Ghouta), a […]
[…] Jahr 2015 besuchte ich das Universitätskrankenhaus vonDamaskus, wo in jedem Bett ein durch Terroranschläge verstümmeltes Kind lag, aus Ghouta, wie mir eine […]
[…] 2015, visiting Damascus’ University Hospital, where bed after bed was occupied by a child maimed by terrorists’ shelling (from Ghouta), a […]
[…] Jahr 2015 besuchte ich das Universitätskrankenhaus von Damaskus, wo in jedem Bett ein durch Terroranschläge verstümmeltes Kind lag, aus Ghouta, wie mir eine […]
[…] in Syria: A First-Hand Account of the Use of Mortars Against Civilians (September 2014) –University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism –Terrorists’ Attack on Damascus Restaurant and Homes: “They have no humanity and no […]
[…] –University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism –Terrorists’ Attack on Damascus Restaurant and Homes: “They have no humanity and no respect for children” –UN Feigns Outrage Over Ghouta While Terrorist Rockets Rain Down on Damascus –Torture, starvation, executions: Eastern Ghouta civilians talk of life under terrorist rule –Western media ignoring reality on the ground in Syria: terrorism and anti-Syria sanctions which help terrorists, Mar 3, 2016 –Syrian American Doctor on The Propaganda, Criminal Sanctions, and War Crimes, In The War on Syria, December 25, 2018 [VIDEO] –Dr Husam al-Samman on Syrian Health Care System, Criminal Western Sanctions, War on Syria, December 10, 2018 [VIDEO] –Western leaders, screw your ‘Sanctions Target the Regime’ blather: Sanctions KILL PEOPLE Tags: Syria […]
[…] factory extremists used to manufacture mortars and missiles, quite possibly those used to bomb civilians in Damascus. It contained a fire-truck stolen from the real Syrian Civil Defense, as well as […]
[…] University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism Febru… […]
[…] University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism&n… […]
[…] *From my February 2015 “University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism“ […]
[…] *From my February 2015 “University Hospital, Damascus: Meeting Victims of Western-backed Mortar and Rocket Terrorism“ […]
[…] et leurs victimes ont été nombreuses au fil des ans, et j’ai notamment vu de nombreux enfants mutilés et gravement blessés par les bombardements des terroristes, et de nombreuses anciennes […]
[…] encounters with mortars and their victims were many over the years, including seeing numerous children maimed and with critical injuries from the terrorists’ shelling, many ancient Damascene houses partially […]
[…] with mortars and their victims were many over the years, including seeing numerous children maimed and with critical injuries from the terrorists’ shelling, many ancient Damascene […]
[…] with mortars and their victims were many over the years, including seeing numerous children maimed and with critical injuries from the terrorists’ shelling, many ancient Damascene […]
[…] with mortars and their victims were many over the years, including seeing numerous children maimed https://ingaza.wordpress.com/2015/03/03/university-hospital-damascus-meeting-victims-of-western-back… and with critical injuries from the terrorists’ shelling, many ancient Damascene houses partially […]
[…] would return from school, or be shelled while at school. Untold numbers of Syrian civilians have been maimed over the past decade by such shelling, untold numbers more […]
[…] would return from school, or be shelled while at school. Untold numbers of Syrian civilians have been maimed over the past decade by such shelling, untold numbers more […]
[…] from school, or be shelled while at school. Untold numbers of Syrian civilians have been maimed over the past decade by such shelling, untold numbers more […]
[…] from school, or be shelled while at school. Untold numbers of Syrian civilians have been maimed over the past decade by such shelling, untold numbers more […]
[…] from school, or be shelled while at school. Untold numbers of Syrian civilians have been maimed over the past decade by such shelling, untold numbers more […]
[…] von der Schule zurückkehren oder in der Schule unter Beschuss geraten würden. Unzählige syrische Zivilisten wurden in den letzten zehn Jahren durch solchen Beschuss […]
[…] the Syrian reconciliation movement; and the heinous acts committed against Syrian civilians by terrorists, whether from the FSA or Nour al-Deen al-Zenki or ISIS or […]
[…] around the country were, Syrians in Damascus are finally able to walk their streets without fear of being maimed or murdered. The current terrorism they face is the West’s war on the Syrian […]
[…] the country were, Syrians in Damascus are finally able to walk their streets without fear of being maimed or murdered. The current terrorism they face is the West’s war on the Syrian […]
[…] killing one child and injuring 65 more, just some of the countless children killed and injured by shelling over the […]
[…] killing one child and injuring 65 more, just some of the countless children killed and injured by shelling over the […]
[…] killing one child and injuring 65 more, just some of the countless children killed and injured by shelling over the […]
[…] one child and injuring 65 more, just some of the countless children killed and injured by shelling over the […]
[…] one child and injuring 65 more, just some of the countless children killed and injured by shelling over the […]