Turkey uses white phosphorus in the alleged ‘safe zone’ in Syria – Report
The Organization for the Prohibition of Chemical Weapons (OPCW) said that it was “collecting information with regard to possible use of chemical weapons” following reports white phosphorus was used by Turkish forces against civilians earlier this week, the Guardian reported on Friday.
Mohammed suffered severe burns to his upper body, losing most of the skin on his torso, neck and arms.[Readers who click on the following link should know the image is explicit and hard to watch].
“I heard the Turkish jet overhead just before the explosion,” he said.
The boy reportedly endured 12 hours of agony before arriving at the hospital, where it took the nurses 20 minutes to manage to inject morphine into the child’s severely burnt body.
The patients reportedly arrived at the hospital with burns from “unknown weapons.” According to the NY Post, the Red Crescent has said it was “working together with [its] international partners to investigate the subject.”
Turkish President Recep Tayyip Erdogan called the claims “speculations” and “disinformation.”
It is illegal to use in urban areas or in proximity to civilians as it lights up on contact with water – in the air or in the skin – being virtually impossible to put out as long as water is present, causing severe 3rd degree burns. Copper salt solutions must be used to end such fires.
The IDF announced in 2013 that shells containing “minimal amounts” of white phosphorus would be “removed from active duty soon.”
In 2009 NATO declined to release its findings after it looked into the death of an 8-year-old girl who allegedly burned to death by white phosphorus munitions, Human Rights Watch reported.
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