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2 Dec 2020 18:23:14 UTC
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Lovely Syria, But Then...More Deadly Western Sanctions
Footage from June, Damascus. Mostly lovely. Yet, today the unbearable, cruel, criminal latest round of US sanctions against the people of Syria took place.

This is crushing them. Prices have skyrocketed. The Syrian pound has gone nuts, 6 times its value of some months ago. People can't afford basic goods.

And as a man I interviewed noted, the sanctions prevent the import not only of medicines but the materials needed to produce medicines.

They are sadistic and punitive sanctions, designed to hurt, even kill, Syrians, to break their support for their leadership.

That won't succeed. But many, many, innocent Syrians will be hurt while America tries to break their will.

Related:

"...I’ve lived in, spent considerable time in, or visited areas under sanctions and siege, and I’ve seen first hand how sanctions are a form of terrorism, choking civilians, depriving them of basic and urgent medical care, food, employment, and travel entitlements that many of us in Western nations take for granted.

When I was in Syria last October, a man told me his wife had been diagnosed with breast cancer, but because of the sanctions he couldn’t get her the conventional treatments most in the West would avail of.

In 2016, in Aleppo, before it was liberated of al-Qaeda and co, Dr. Nabil Antaki told me how –because of the sanctions– it had taken him well over a year to get a simple part for his gastroenterology practise.

In 2015, visiting Damascus' University Hospital, where bed after bed was occupied by a child maimed by terrorists’ shelling (from Ghouta), a nurse told me:

“We have so many difficulties to ensure that we have antibiotics, specialized medicines, maintenance of the equipment... Because of the sanctions, many parts are not available, we have difficulties obtaining them.”

Visiting a prosthetic limbs factory in Damascus in 2016, I was told that, due to the sanctions, smart technology and 3D scanners –used to determine the exact location where a limb should be fixed– were not available. Considering the over eight years of war and terrorism in Syria, there are untold numbers of civilians and soldiers in need of this technology to simply get a prosthetic limb fixed so they can get on with their lives. But no, America’s concern for the Syrian people means that this, too, is near impossible.

In 2018, Syria’s minister of health told me Syria had formerly been dubbed by the World Health Organization a “pioneer state” in providing health care.

“Syria had 60 pharmaceutical factories and was exporting medicine to 58 countries. Now, 16 of these factories are out of service. Terrorists partially or fully destroyed 46 hospitals and 620 medical centres.”

I asked the minister about the complex in Barzeh, targeted with missile strikes
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https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SJZJEU9jGUc
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