By Cam McGrath
December 18, 2011
CAIRO, Dec 18, 2011 (IPS)
Activists across the Middle East are reporting a mysterious
toxin, possibly a banned nerve agent, in the thick clouds of tear gas used by
security forces to suppress anti-government protests in recent months.
“I felt weak and dizzy for several days, and my hands wouldn’t
stop shaking,” recalls Mahmoud Hassan, an Egyptian marketing executive who was hospitalized
last month after inhaling tear gas during a protest against military rule in
Cairo. The gas used against protesters was many times stronger than that used
by security forces during the 18-day uprising that toppled Egyptian dictator
Hosni Mubarak in February, he insists.
“This wasn’t tear gas, it was something else,” says Hassan. “It
burned the skin and lungs, and we all fell to the ground shaking
uncontrollably.”
A similar gas is suspected of causing the deaths of at least
eight civilians in Bahrain since February.
In Yemen, doctors reported that anti-government protesters
exposed to what appeared to be tear gas arrived at field hospitals paralyzed,
unconscious, or in convulsions. Routine treatments for tear gas exposure had no
effect.
“We are seeing symptoms in the patient’s nerves, not in their
respiratory systems. I’m 90 percent sure it’s nerve gas and not tear gas that
was used,” Dr. Sami Zaid, a physician at the Science and Technology Hospital in
Sanaa, said in March.
Conventional tear gas is a white powder composed of
ortho-chlorobenzylidene-malononitrile, commonly known as CS. The chemical was
developed for crowd control in the 1950s, proving a more powerful irritant but
less toxic than the chloroacetophenone (CN) series it has largely replaced.
It is unclear whether the numerous reports of a toxic
incapacitating gas involve one chemical compound or manufacturer, or many. But
the observed symptoms, whether in Cairo or Sanaa, are remarkably similar: a
severe burning sensation on the skin and in the lungs, nausea, paralysis,
convulsions, and in some cases, death.
Tear gas canisters recovered from protest sites in Arab cities
bear markings of several different companies. Most of the canisters found near
Cairo’s Tahrir Square after recent protests carried the manufacturing stamp of
Combined Tactical Systems (CTS), an American firm that produces chemical
irritants and smoke munitions for military and police forces around the world.
Other CS canisters carried the markings of U.S.-based firm
Federal Laboratories and British weapons manufacturer Chemring Defence.
A victim wedged on a motorbike between two men being rushed to a field hospital.
“We think the CTS canisters are causing the strange symptoms
(reported in Egypt),” says Sherif Azer of the Egyptian Organization for Human
Rights (EOHR). “But we also found some canisters with no markings at all.”
In contrast, most of the canisters recovered in Bahrain bear the
markings of U.S. firm NonLethal Technologies. Federal Laboratories, CTS,
Chemring, and French security firm SAE Alsetex also supplied tear gas to the
Gulf Arab state in recent years.
CTS is a leading supplier of riot control agents to the Yemeni
government.
Rights activists investigating claims of a toxic tear gas are
exploring several theories. One of the first to emerge was that the substance
used against protesters across the region was dibenzoxazepine (CR), a form of
tear gas up to ten times more powerful than CS as a lachrymator.
Return to sender....
The riot control agent produces similar effects to CS, but also
induces intense pain on exposed skin and membranes, which becomes more painful
when flushed with water.
The highly persistent form of tear gas has been used by Israeli
forces to suppress demonstrations in the Palestinian Territories.
It was also used by the American military to flush out enemy combatants,
but shelved from civilian use due to its carcinogenic properties.
While there are accounts of people seeing used tear gas
canisters with CR markings in Egypt and Bahrain, journalists and rights
activists investigating the issue have been unable to verify their claims.
Whatever works in a war zone...
“We’ve only seen canisters marked CS, although we cannot rule
out that some canisters were mislabeled or tampered with to increase their
potency,” says Azer.
Another commonly heard accusation is that security forces are
using expired tear gas.
CS gas has a shelf life of three to five years, but activists in
Bahrain and Egypt have published photos of used canisters with production dates
more than ten years old. They argue that over time the chemical components in
CS break down, forming dangerous byproducts.
One concern is a buildup of malononitrile in the expired
canisters. When heated, the acidic powder degrades into highly toxic hydrogen
cyanide gas ~ the same gas used with lethal effect in Nazi Germany.
What long term price will his health pay for this necessary bravado?
According to medical sources, symptoms of cyanide poisoning
include weakness, nausea, and difficulty in breathing. Higher concentrations
can lead to a loss of consciousness followed by convulsions, muscle twitching
and apnea. Less than a gram of cyanide is fatal to humans.
Dr. Ramez Moustafa, a neurologist at Ain Shams University in
Cairo, noted many of these symptoms during his visits to field hospitals in
Tahrir Square last month.
“My colleagues and I saw cases where the tear gas caused people
to have convulsions and involuntary movements,” Moustafa told IPS. “Even in
high concentrations, regular tear gas does not (affect the) nervous system.
There were reports that some people died of seizures.”
Hazard of the business for these international photographers.
Experts, however, dispute the possibility of lethal chemicals
forming spontaneously in aging or improperly stored tear gas canisters. They
argue that like medicine, CS loses its efficacy over time.
“Tear gases usually lose effectiveness and sometimes (do) not
even ignite to start the smoking process when they are expired,” says Kamran
Loghman, former president of Zarc International, a California-based
manufacturer of non-lethal chemical sprays. “They do not turn into another
chemical.”
More likely, he suggests, the observed symptoms are the result
of overexposure. Since the Arab Spring, security forces have stepped up the use
of tear gas to counter protesters’ growing tolerance to the chemical irritant ~
whether due to repeated exposure or physical means such as gas masks and
goggles. Videos show riot police saturating demonstrations with tear gas, often
in confined spaces.
"Leisure Wear"
The larger doses of tear gas could push an individual’s exposure
well beyond the “intolerable concentration” (IC), the mount required to
incapacitate them. While the margin between the concentration giving
intolerable effect and that which may cause serious injury is high, studies
have shown that with prolonged or intense exposure the human body metabolizes
CS gas into deadly cyanide.
Lab testing has so far proven inconclusive. Egyptian health
ministry officials declared that the spent tear gas canisters it tested
contained no deadly toxins. Independent analysis allegedly found the tear gas
used in Cairo contained a mixture of 2.5 percent bromine cyanide and arsenic ~
though this could not be verified.
Further testing is under way.
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