Worries about Muslim terrorist poisoning the water supply in Paris and Brussels have lead to Hospitals distributing Sarin Anti-toxin for the first time in either country’s history (France or Belgium). Chemicals that can be used to make Sarin Gas were found in a Brussels raid.
Chemicals found in Brussels raid; Hospitals distributing Sarin Anti-toxin |
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Hospitals and emergency services across France have been supplied with the most powerful antidote to Sarin, and other nerve gas chemicals, for the first time. Under a November 14 emergency decree, the Army’s medical service was also ordered to distribute stocks of the drug Atropine.
Manuel Valls, the French prime minister, confirmed that the danger of ‘chemical and biological weapons’ being used by IS was at an all time high.
Soldiers and para-military police patrolled streets across both Paris the Brussels as the massive manhunt continued for Salah Abdeslam, the only known attacker from the Friday 13th attacks to have escaped alive.
He is thought to have returned to Belgium straight afterwards, and there have been several unconfirmed sightings of him in Brussels, but ‘he could be anywhere now,’ said an investigating source.
Two of the suicide bombers had been living in the Molenbeek, and the Belgian authorities have so far charged three people with involvement in the attacks. The Turkish authorities have, meanwhile, arrested three people with suspected ties to ISIS.
It identified one of the suspects as Ahmet Dahmani, 26, a Belgian national of Moroccan descent, who allegedly scouted target sites for the Paris attacks. He was arrested at a hotel in Antalya.
Two other suspects, Syrian nationals Ahmet Tahir, 29, and Mohammed Verd, 23, were arrested after they traveled from Syria to meet Dahmani, a Turkish government spokesman reported. The two were going to take him to Syria, it is alleged.