Sickened by footage of doctors trying to help child victims of a gas attack, US lawmakers Wednesday renewed calls for a US-led no fly zone over Syria, AFP reports.
 Sickened by footage of doctors trying to help child victims of a gas attack, US lawmakers Wednesday renewed calls for a US-led no fly zone over Syria, AFP reports.
They were also warned that the use of this chlorine gas could rise.
"I'm a doctor and I'm very familiar with death. But I never seen a more obscene way to kill children and never watched so many suffer in such an obscene manner," doctor Annie Sparrow told lawmakers.
While the Syrian government has handed over its stocks of chemical weapons for destruction by the international community, chlorine does not count as a banned material because it has many uses, such as purifying water.
"The Syrian government is using chlorine gas with impunity," the former US ambassador to Syria, Robert Ford, told the House foreign affairs committee.
President Bashar al-Assad has denied being behind a series of chlorine gas attacks launched in barrel bombs from helicopters over the northwestern province of Idlib since March. As many as 45 attacks have been reported.
Despite a UN resolution outlawing chlorine gas attacks, Ford said that Assad, fighting a four-year civil war to oust him, is not deterred.
"His forces are running out of manpower and as that dynamic goes forward the Syrian regime will more and more want to use chemical weapons to make up for those manpower shortages," Ford said.
Doctor Mohamed Tennari vividly described the night of March 16, when a wave of explosive barrel bombs were dropped from helicopters over his home town of Sarmin, filling the air with "a bleach-like odor."
"Dozens of people experienced difficulty breathing, with their eyes and throats burning, and many began secreting from the mouth," he said, speaking through a translator.
Among the victims were three small children, Aisha, three, her sister Sara, two, and brother one-year-old Mohammad. They "were a sickly pale color when they arrived, a sign of severe lack of oxygen and chemical exposure," Tennari said.
Doctors were forced to treat them as they lay on the body of their grandmother, who had succumbed to the deadly poison, as they had no free beds.
"As quickly as we worked, we could not save them," Tennari said, after a video of the scene was played in the chamber. The children's mother and father also died.
A chlorine gas bomb had fallen down their ventilation shaft, turning their basement where they had tried to shelter into "a makeshift gas chamber."
   Protecting the children 
Sparrow, from the Ichan school of Medicine at Mount Sinai, New York, described working on the ground in Syria. Her voice cracked with emotion.
"Syrian children and Syrian civilians deserve protection and the United States can provide it," she said.
The US administration has long ruled out setting up a no-fly zone over parts of Syria as too complicated and difficult to administer. And State Department spokesman John Kirby reiterated Wednesday that it was not on the table.
"There's no plans to conduct or to effect a no-fly zone over Syria with respect to the use of these chemicals. What has to happen is he (Assad) has to stop using them," Kirby said.
But Sparrow backed the idea, also put forward by Ford and Tennari.
"Creating a no-bomb zone would stop the most important tools that have been used to slaughter and terrorize Syrian civilians, especially the children who are the most vulnerable to these toxic gases and whose small bodies are literally ripped apart by the hideous shrapnel inside these bombs," Sparrow said.
The US "policy has to change" and implementing a no-fly zone would lead to "denying Assad ownership of the skies," agreed Representative Ed Royce, committee chairman.
"Syrians would no longer be forced to choose between staying above ground where they could be killed by the shrapnel Assad packs inside his barrel bombs or going below ground where they are more vulnerable to suffocating from chlorine gas," he said.