clear

Creating new perspectives since 2009

Turkey treats 58 Syrians of Idlib chemical attack

April 6, 2017 at 12:44 am

Syrian child receives treatment after Assad Regime forces carried out a chemical attack in Idlib, Syria on April 4, 2017. ( Bahjat Najar – Anadolu Agency )

58 Syrians who were injured in the chemical attack in Syria’s north western Idlib province, were transferred by Turkish rescue teams to hospitals in Turkey’s southern city of Hatay, the Istanbul-based Anadolu Agency reported today, quoting a statement by the office of Hatay governor.

“The injured people are being treated at several private and state hospitals including Antakya, Reyhanli and Iskenderun state hospitals, and Hatay-based Mustafa Kemal University Hospital,” the statement said.

The statement pointed out that following the attack, a team of 112 people, equipped with 22 ambulances, were dispatched to the bordering city of Gaziantep to transfer the Syrian victims to the Turkish hospitals. Three of the transferred victims have died, according to the statement.

Read: Syria regime bombs hospital treating victims of chemical massacre

Earlier on Wednesday, Turkish Health Minister Recep Akdag said that some 29 people had been transferred to Turkey for treatment on Tuesday, and were being treated at hospitals in the border provinces of Hatay and Gaziantep.

The minister also noted that they had evidence concerning Tuesday’s attack in the town of Khan Shaykun which led to widespread international outrage.

“We have some findings of a chemical attack. We are documenting the findings and will send them to the World Health Organization”, he said, adding “humanity should not remain insensitive to this issue.”

More than 100 civilians were killed and 500 others, mostly children, were injured in the attack carried out by Al-Assad regime warplanes yesterday in Idlib southern village of Khan Shaykun, according to the Syrian interim government’s health minister, Firas Jundi.