BEIRUT (AP) --
Syrian government forces pressed on with a military offensive in eastern
Damascus on Thursday, bombing rebel-held suburbs where the opposition
said the regime had killed over 100 people the day before in a chemical
weapons attack.
The government has denied
allegations it used chemical weapons in artillery barrages on the area
known as eastern Ghouta on Wednesday as "absolutely baseless."
The
United States, Britain and France have demanded that a team of U.N.
experts already in Syria be granted immediate access to investigate the
site.
Syrian opposition figures and activists
have reported widely varying death tolls from Wednesday's attack, from
136 to as high as 1,300. But even the most conservative tally would make
it the deadliest alleged chemical attack in Syria's civil war.
The
Britain-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said it had no word
on casualties in the Thursday morning bombing of eastern Ghouta. It said
Syrian warplanes conducted several air raids on eastern and western
suburbs of Damascus, including three that took place within five
minutes.
The Local Coordination Committees,
another activist group, said President Bashar Assad's forces were
bombing eastern Ghouta from the Qasioun mountain overlooking Damascus.
It also reported several air raids on the suburbs.
Wednesday's
alleged chemical attack had killed scores of children. The small,
lifeless bodies appeared in amateur videos, wrapped in white cloths,
their pale skin unmarked by any wounds.
Images
of dead children lined shoulder to shoulder in rooms and of others
being treated for breathing problems brought worldwide condemnation and
shock.
Mohammed Abdullah, an activist in the
suburb of Saqba told The Associated Press via Skype on Thursday that
most of the dead were buried hours after the attack in collective graves
in different areas in eastern Ghouta. The burials took place quickly
for fear the bodies might decompose as a result of the heat and lack of
electricity, he said.
Relatives identified
some of their dead family members before burial while unidentified
victims were photographed and their graves tagged with a number in case
their loved ones come to collect their bodies in the future.
"Most of the dead were buried in mass graves," Abdullah said.
UNICEF said in a statement that the reports of attacks on civilians, presumably including children, were "deeply disturbing."
"Such
horrific acts should be a reminder to all the parties and all who have
influence on them that this terrible conflict has gone on far too long
and children have suffered more than enough," UNICEF said. "Children
must be protected, and those who fail to protect them will be held
accountable."
From New York, the U.N. Security
Council called for "a thorough, impartial and prompt investigation" of
the latest allegation of chemical weapons' use in Syria.
Syria's
state media quoted on Thursday an unnamed Foreign Ministry official,
according to its standard practice, as saying that allowing the U.N.
team to go to Ghouta would require an agreement between the Syrian
government and the United Nations.
A 20-member
U.N. team led by Swedish chemical weapons expert Ake Sellstrom is in
Damascus since Sunday to investigate three sites where chemical weapons
attacks allegedly occurred in the past: the village of Khan al-Assal
just west of the embattled northern city of Aleppo and two other
locations being kept secret for security reasons.
France,
meanwhile, raised the possibility of the use of force in Syria if it is
proven that Assad's regime used chemical weapons, while Turkey said
several red lines have been crossed.
"We need a
reaction by the international community .... a reaction of force," said
French Foreign Minister Laurent Fabius. He excluded boots on the ground
as an option, though, and declined to be "more precise" on the type of
force that could be used.
Yuval Steinitz,
Israel's minister for intelligence and strategic affairs, said their
"intelligence estimates" concluded that chemical weapons indeed were
used, and appeared to blame Assad, calling his regime "exceptionally
cruel."
In Germany, Turkish and German foreign
ministers underlined demands for the Syrian regime to allow U.N.
inspectors to investigate the claims. The Turkish diplomat called for
new sanctions.
"Several red lines have been
crossed - if sanctions are not imposed immediately, then we will lose
our power to deter," said Turkish Foreign Minister Ahmet Davutoglu.
He
added that he had spoken to U.N. chief Ban Ki-moon and told him that
"the U.N. must not behave hesitantly anymore, sanctions must now be
imposed."
German Foreign Minister Guido
Westerwelle said the Syrian opposition's allegations were "so serious,
so monstrous that it is necessary to enable a real examination before
talking or speculating about consequences."
The
unrest in Syria began in March 2011 and later exploded into a civil
war. More than 100,000 people have been killed in the conflict so far,
according to U.N. figures.
----
Associated Press writer Geir Moulson contributed to this report from Berlin.
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